Clip does offer a Pace option, which lengthens clips. When I created an automatic movie with iMovie using the same material, the result was more pleasing, with elegant dissolve transitions added. More disconcerting was how unsparingly the app cut my clips. You can also use music from tracks on your iPhone. The default music wasn't appropriately energetic, but selecting a more driving soundtrack from the list of canned music was easy. I first added several clips I shot at a community college basketball tournament and chose Automatic. (Opens in a new window) Read Our Adobe Premiere Pro Review I tested the app on my iPhone 6s ($649.99 at AT&T Wireless) (Opens in a new window) with 64GB of memory. It runs on iOS 8.1 or later, so your device can be pretty out of date and still run the app. At 91MB, Premiere Clip is a much smaller download than iMovie's more than 600MB. It doesn't require Premiere Pro on the desktop. Getting StartedĬlip is a free app, but you do have to sign into an Adobe account-which includes a free option-to use it. Clip is an easy-to-use, effective app, but Apple's iMovie tops it in a few significant ways. And it lets you continue editing on the desktop in Premiere Pro, thanks to Creative Cloud. Even though editing video on such a small screen isn't ideal, the app makes spiffing up video clips shot on the phone simple. That's where Adobe Premier Clip comes in, letting you cut and combine footage shot on your iPhone into pleasing presentations. And you definitely want to show people well-presented digital movies rather than random, untrimmed video clips. If you have an iPhone 6s or later Apple smartphone, you should take advantage of its glorious 4K video capture capability. How to Set Up Two-Factor Authentication.How to Record the Screen on Your Windows PC or Mac.How to Convert YouTube Videos to MP3 Files.How to Save Money on Your Cell Phone Bill.How to Free Up Space on Your iPhone or iPad.How to Block Robotexts and Spam Messages.
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