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open movie editor
Linux video editing... is quite possible
Submitted by Maarten on Sun, 16/03/2008 - 02:34. Archived inSo, you're a Linux user and you want to process some footage, be it of your mom's birthday or perhaps your own humble video project. You don't want to resort to Windows (or obviously a Mac for that matter) which are supposedly (and probably) easier platforms to edit video.
Give it a shot with your Linux system first. I've no experience capturing video from a digital camera yet, but that should be possible with Kino. I have a simple digital photo camera which can record videos in XVID/MP3 format, or so KDE tells me. I took some random shots with it over the years that I have all saved, so I figured I might experiment with these recordings for a bit, since I plan to do more video editing in the future to process old VHS tapes to digital storage.
Avidemux
The first program I tried was Avidemux. This program allowed me to cut up, stick together and apply certain visual changes to videos. One feature I needed Avidemux for was the altering of the frames per second. The first editing program that I used got into trouble when video samples had a frame rate that wasn't exactly 25 per second. Avidemux can also alter the image by adding filters. These filters can do things like resize the image, add colours to it, blur the image, sharpen the image, add scan lines to it, add subtitles or even add a whirl effect to the video. The most useful application of Avidemux is perhaps the possibility to convert a video to another video (and audio) format.
The Open Movie Editor
Another interesting program is the Open Movie Editor. This software is designed to be an editor rather than a conversion utility. It allows for quick and simple placing of video samples on a time line, while cutting them up or arranging them into a proper sequence. Audio tracks can be added in the same manner. Transitions between scenes (i.e. inserted video files or cut up samples) can be achieved very easily by letting two scenes overlap for a number of seconds. By doing this the overlap becomes visible in the timeline and when the video is played the one part of video is automatically faded into the other. I had some trouble finding an audio and video codec that would actually save the video sequence to a file that was properly readable. The probable cause of this is that I used a precompiled version and not too many codecs were installed or detected the right way by the Movie Editor.
Kdenlive
Because of this I tried another editor, named Kdenlive. I finally settled on this one because
- it exports videos properly, providing many audio and video codecs
- sports a couple of effects/ transition types by default
- is a KDE application and is therefore graphically integrated and translated into Dutch (I like consistency)
The only disadvantage in my case was that for some yet unexplained reason Kdenlive would crash every now and then, but saving the project regularly takes care of that. This is probably again because of the fact that I used a pre-compiled version. I know it's not a good excuse but everyone deserves to be lazy every now and then. Usually I compile software myself, but because I'm now using Kubuntu on a laptop in stead of my usual Slackware set up this makes it very tempting to apt-get everything.
The results
I've uploaded two of my experiments to YouTube, so anyone reading this can admire or ignore the results of my video editing adventure. The first video shows some of the (very bad quality and out of focus) material which I recorded with my photo camera while moving, using transitions and some other effects. Eventually I used Kdenlive for this, but I achieved about the same using the Open Movie Editor.
The second one (also made with Kdenlive) is a recording of people walking down a shopping street. It's been slowed down, a "charcoal" effect has been applied to it, and the beginning and ending of the video demonstrate the blur effect.
I have probably missed out on a lot of alternatives, but these are the tools I've chosen to use for now, and Kdenlive does the job quite nicely. Finally I've taken some screenshots of the three programs that I tried:



