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iMovie '09 and iDVD: The Missing Manual



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iMovie '09 and iDVD: The Missing Manual
ISBN  0596801416
Release Date  01 April 2009
Category  Multimedia
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Apple's iMovie '09 is more accessible and comprehensive than iMovie '08--and impressive right out of the box. The one thing not in the box is a user's guide, and that's where this book comes in. You'll make the most out of the applications if you get help from the experts. iMovie '09 and iDVD: The Missing Manual explains everything you need to know to turn raw digital footage into high quality film.

Stabilizing Shaky Footage By David Pogue and Aaron Miller Not every piece of video needs fancy effects. In fact, most video is probably better without a Dream filter and Picture-in-Picture. The unadulterated stuff straight from your camera usually looks best. In fact, if your footage needs any help at all, it?s probably in the cameraman department. Don?t take this personally. Handheld shots, the most common kind of home video, are notoriously unstable, and that?s an instant giveaway that you?re an amateur. You can have the hands of a surgeon and still end up with shaky footage. This is true even with all the newfangled image stabilization technology that comes in the latest cameras. Don?t give up (and don?t resort to carrying a tripod everywhere). iMovie ?09 can stabilize your video after the fact, using one of its most amazing new features. Video Stabilization iMovie has powers that leave other ?beginner? video-editing programs panting with envy. It?s filled with tools that have historically been found only in professional editing programs. iMovie?s stabilization feature, for example, is inherited from Apple?s $1,000 Final Cut Pro software. It works by analyzing every single frame in a clip, recognizing the changes in both camera position (movement up, down, left, or right) and camera rotation. Once it figures that bit out, it knows how to slide and rotate your clips to iron out the shakes. Unfortunately, this sort of analysis takes a very long time?roughly ten minutes for every minute of video (more or less depending on your Mac?s speed). The results, however, are worth it. The stabilization feature works absolute magic on most jerky, bumpy handheld footage. It works so well, in fact, that it can look positively creepy, as though you were floating along on a magic carpet. Fortunately, there?s a slider that lets you control how much stabilizing goes on. Four Ways to Trigger Stabilization Analysis Before iMovie can stabilize your video, it has to perform the above-mentioned analysis, which takes a long time. Fortunately, you have a lot of control over when the program does this processing: 1) Stabilize during import. You?re offered the opportunity to perform the analysis when you bring the footage into your Mac, as described in Chapter 1. 2) Stabilize selected clips. You can analyze certain clips at any time. Select one, or a group of them, and then choose File-->Analyze for Stabilization. 3) Stabilize an entire Event. In the list, click an Event?s name and then choose File-->Analyze for Stabilization. This option is great if the Event in question is someone jumping on a trampoline during an earthquake. 4) Stabilize a clip in the Event Browser. Double-click the clip to open the Inspector panel. Click Analyze Entire Clip as shown in Figure 7-1. 5) Stabilize a clip that?s already in the storyboard. Point to the clip, and then from the gear-icon menu, choose Clip Adjustments. On the panel that appears, turn on ?Smooth clip motion.? This is a great trick when you?re looking over a project in progress and discover that one particular jerky shot is ruining the flow. It can also save you a lot of time, because iMovie stabilizes only the 20 seconds of a clip that you?ve actually used?plus an additional second on either side?rather than processing the 15-minute original (see Figure 7-2). If you later decide to lengthen the clip you stabilized (by more than a second), you?ll need to do more analyzing. The once-checked checkbox in the Inspector will require rechecking. Fortunately, iMovie analyzes only the new part you added that wasn?t already analyzed. Then go knit a sweater while you wait for your Mac to analyze your footage. Be prepared for a wait when you decide to analyze a clip. Depending on the speed of your computer, it can take between five and twelve minutes (or longer for older Macs) for every minute of footage stabilized. If you have a lot to analyze, let the Mac do its job overnight while you get some beauty sleep. A stabilized clip in your project displays a checkmark in the Stabilization box, plus the Maximum Zoom slider. Turn Stabilization on and off all you like; iMovie never has to analyze a clip but once.

User review
helpful
I can generally figure out the ins and outs of software without manuals. But this book helped me pick up finer points I would have missed.

User review
Great resource
This is an excellent resource to learn iMovie 09. I have gone through it a couple of times and found so many tricks for making great home movies. I was blown away by what iMovie 09 can do. Perhaps my expectations were too low, but for much less than $100 (for iLife 09) you are able to make some really nice home movies and distribute them in many different ways. This book has a nice flow and introduces various movie and iMovie concepts easily and comfortably. I suggest it.

User review
Another Winner!
Great job on this new Missing Manual. It's a huge help for anyone moving from iMovie 6 to iMovie 9 with it's very new, much more mainstream approach to video editing. As usual with the Missing Manual series, this book saved me hours of trial and error learning and let me start editing footage right away.

User review
A must,,.!!
If you're trying to enter into the imovie 09 world, this book indeed is the best way helping you do it fast and easy.
Everything is clear and very well explained,, And tips that you certainly won't find on any apple web page,,
For all this, I recommend this book.

User review
Clear and comprehensive
I'm about halfway through this book so far, and have found it to be excellent. It's quite clear and readable, even though some of the advanced features are fairly complex. It also seems to be comprehensive, covering all the myriad details. Finally, it is well organized. This is challenging, an art and a science. There are some `by the way` tips that are introduced at a useful time, even though you wouldn't know to look for them there. I'm looking forward the Missing Manual for Snow Leopard.







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