Corel Video Studio Pro X10 User Guide Videostudio UG EN

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Corel® VideoStudio® X10
User Guide

Including VideoStudio Pro and
VideoStudio Ultimate

Contents
Quick start. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
Welcome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
What’s new in Corel VideoStudio X10? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
System requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
Supported file formats . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Hardware acceleration. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Preparing for video editing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
Installing and uninstalling the application . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
Starting and quitting the application . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
Updating the application. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
Corel Support Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
About Corel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18

Learning resources . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
Documentation conventions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
Using the Help system . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
Corel VideoStudio X10 User Guide PDF . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
Understanding VideoStudio terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
Learning with video tutorials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
Using Web-based resources. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24

Workspace tour . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
Exploring the workspaces . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
Switching between workspaces . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
Contents

i

The Welcome book . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
Using the Player panel. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
Using the toolbar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
Customizing the workspace . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36

Capture and import . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41
Using the Options panel in the Capture workspace . . . . . . . . . . . 41
Capturing videos and photos . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
Capturing digital video (DV) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46
Using DV Quick Scan. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46
Capturing analog video . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46
Importing from digital media . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
Scanning and splitting scenes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49

Project basics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
Creating new projects and opening projects . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
Using Instant Project templates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
Setting project properties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
Creating custom profiles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
Using Smart Proxy for a faster, smoother editing experience . . . . 57
Previewing your project or clips . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58
Undoing and redoing actions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59
Showing and hiding grid lines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60
Saving projects . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61
Saving projects by using Smart Package. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61
Adding cues and chapters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62

Organize and find media . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65
Using the Library. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65

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Corel VideoStudio Pro User Guide

Sorting, viewing, and filtering clips in the Library . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68
Resizing thumbnails . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70
Tagging files as 3D . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71

Timeline. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 75
Switching between Timeline views. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 75
Showing and hiding tracks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78
Adding and swapping tracks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78
Grouping and ungrouping . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80
Using Ripple Editing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81

Edit media . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 85
Using the Options panel in the Edit workspace . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 86
Converting multiple files . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 89
Adding video clips. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 90
Adding photos . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 91
Time remapping . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 92
Modifying video playback speed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 94
Using Freeze Frame . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 99
Replacing media clips . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100
Trimming a clip . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 101
Using Split by Scene . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 104
Trimming video into multiple clips . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 105
Saving trimmed clips . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 107
Taking a snapshot from a video clip. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 108
Enhancing clips . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 108
Adjusting white balance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 110
Applying pan and zoom effect . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111
Working with the Mask Creator. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 115
Contents

iii

Track transparency . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 120
360 video . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 122

Titles and subtitles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 127
Using the Title Safe area . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 127
Adding titles using the Library . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 128
Adding titles with the Subtitle Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 129
Formatting text . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 133
Applying text effects and animation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 137
Converting titles to image and animation files . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 138

Transitions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 141
Adding transitions. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 141
Saving and deleting transitions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 144

Graphics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 145
Adding color clips . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 145
Adding color patterns . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 146
Adding backgrounds. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 146
Adding objects or frames . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 147
Adding Flash animations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 148
Customizing objects, frames, and animations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 148

Video filters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 149
Applying filters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 149
Marking filters as favorites. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 150
Applying multiple filters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 151
Customizing filters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 152

Overlay clips . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 155
Adding clips to overlay tracks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 155
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Corel VideoStudio Pro User Guide

Adjusting overlay clips . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 156
Combining Overlay clips to create an Ultra HD (4K) video. . . . . . 158
Applying motion to an overlay clip . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 159
Adjusting the overall transparency of overlay clips . . . . . . . . . . . 160
Adding borders to overlay clips . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 161
Blending overlay clips with the background . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 161
Adding a mask frame . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 164
Using video masks with overlay clips . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 165

Motion tracking . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 167
Tracking motion of video objects . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 167
Matching motion to a tracking path . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 173
Customizing motion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 179

Tracking paths. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 185
Adjusting tracking paths . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 185
Using objects on tracking paths. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 189
Using the Path Library . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 192

Audio . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 195
Adding audio files . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 196
Using Audio Ducking to automatically adjust volume. . . . . . . . . 197
Splitting an audio track from a video clip. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 199
Using Auto Music . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 200
Balancing the volume of multiple clips with Normalize Audio. . . 201
Using the Clip Volume Control . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 202
Trimming and cutting audio clips . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 202
Stretching audio duration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 203
Applying fade-in/out . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 204

Contents

v

Using the Sound Mixer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 204
Adjusting stereo channels . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 205
Using the Surround Sound Mixer. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 205
Mixing Surround Sound . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 206
Duplicating an audio channel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 207
Applying audio filters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 208

Painting Creator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 209
Working with Painter Creator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 210
Switching between Painting Creator modes. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 213
Creating images and animations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 213

Live screen capture . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 217
Starting a screen capture project . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 217
Recording your screen. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 218

FastFlick . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 223
Creating a FastFlick project . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 223
Selecting a template (FastFlick) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 224
Adding media clips (FastFlick) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 224
Editing titles (FastFlick) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 225
Adding music (FastFlick) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 227
Applying Pan & Zoom effects (FastFlick). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 228
Setting movie duration (FastFlick) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 228
Saving to video files for computer playback (FastFlick) . . . . . . . . 229
Uploading to the Web (FastFlick). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 229
Editing your movie in VideoStudio (FastFlick) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 231

Making FastFlick templates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 233
Terminology for FastFlick templates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 233
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Corel VideoStudio Pro User Guide

Rules for creating FastFlick templates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 236
Creating FastFlick templates. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 238

Stop motion animation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 241
Creating a Stop Motion project . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 241
Capturing stop motion images in Corel VideoStudio . . . . . . . . . 243
Using the DSLR Enlarged Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 244

Multi-Camera Editing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 247
The Multi-Camera Editor workspace . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 248
Basic steps in multi-camera editing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 250
Importing video and audio clips into the Multi-Camera Editor . . 251
Synchronizing video and audio clips in multi-camera projects . . 252
Choosing an audio source for your multi-camera project . . . . . . 254
Editing multiple clips to create a multi-camera compilation . . . . 255
Adding picture-in-picture (PIP) in the Multi-Camera Editor . . . . . 258
Managing multi-camera source files . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 259
Saving and exporting your multi-camera project . . . . . . . . . . . . 260
Using Smart Proxy with the Multi-Camera Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . 261

Save and share . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 263
Choosing a sharing option . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 263
Saving to video files for computer playback . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 264
Saving to video files for mobile devices . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 266
Saving HTML5 video files . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 268
Uploading to the Web. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 270
Creating 3D video files. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 272
Creating video files from part of a project (trimmed) . . . . . . . . . 274
Creating sound files. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 274

Contents

vii

Working with custom profiles in the Share workspace . . . . . . . . 275

Burn discs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 277
Saving a project to disc . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 277
Assembling files . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 280
Adding and editing chapters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 281
Editing a menu template. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 284
Creating advanced menus . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 287
Previewing your movie and menu before burning . . . . . . . . . . . 289
Burning your project onto a disc . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 290
Copying a disc image file. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 293
Creating disc labels . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 294

Glossary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 297
Shortcuts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 307
Menu command shortcuts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 307
Workspace shortcuts. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 308
Navigation area shortcuts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 308
Timeline shortcuts. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 309
Multi-trim Video shortcuts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 310
Layout settings shortcuts. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 310
Screen capture shortcuts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 311
Other Shortcuts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 311

DV-to-DVD Wizard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 313
Scanning for scenes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 313
Applying templates and burning to DVDs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 315

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Quick start
If you want to dive into Corel VideoStudio right away, this tutorial will
walk you through the key tasks. In this tutorial, you’ll learn how to:
•

Import video clips to the Library

•

Add your clips and photos

•

Review and trim your video clips

•

Add titles

•

Apply transitions

•

Add music

• Save and share
The same basic steps can be applied to create a photo slideshow or
any multimedia presentation that includes photos, video clips, and
music.
For a quick movie, try the FastFlick. For more information, see
“FastFlick” on page 223.
For more details about starting movie projects, see “Project basics” on
page 51.

Import video clips to the Library
Let’s start with the most common situation—the shoot is done and
you’ve transferred your video clips and photos from your camera to
your computer. We can open Corel VideoStudio, and jump directly to
the Edit workspace and the Library.

Quick start

1

The Library is the source for all your media, including video clips,
photos, and music. It also houses templates, transitions, effects, and a
variety of other media assets that you can use in your projects.

1

Click the Edit tab
at the top of the application
window to open the Edit workspace. The Library panel appears in
the upper right corner of the application.

2

Create a folder for your project to keep all your videos together
by clicking the Add a new folder button

.

3

Type a name for the folder.

4

At the top of the Library, click the Import Media Files button
,
select the video clips and photos that you want to use, and click
Open.

Note that the buttons at the top of the Library can be enabled and
disabled to filter the thumbnails by video, photos, and music. If you
don’t see the media you expect to see, check the state of these media
buttons.
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Corel VideoStudio X10

Add your clips and photos
Adding clips and photos to a video project is as easy as dragging
thumbnails for the video clips and photos that you want to use from
the Library to the Timeline.
If you’re looking for a way to get polished results quickly, you can use
an Instant Project template. For more information, see “Using Instant
Project templates” on page 53.

Review and trim your video clips
The key to a successful video is to keep it short enough to hold your
viewer’s interest. Let’s review and trim the video clips.
1

In the Edit workspace, click a video clip in the Timeline.

Quick start

3

2

In the Navigation area of the Player panel, click Clip, and click the
Play button.

3

After you review the clip, drag the orange Trim Marker from the
original starting position to the new starting position. The
Scrubber moves to the selected frame and this frame displays in
the Preview Window.

1

2

1. Trim Marker (one on each end). 2. Scrubber.

4

Now drag the second Trim Marker from the original end position
to the new end position.

5

Click Play.
Note: Changes made to files imported into the Library do not
affect the original files.

You can also trim video clips in the Timeline itself by dragging the end
handles of a clip.

Want to edit a section in the middle? Try Multi-Trim Video. For more
information, see “Trimming video into multiple clips” on page 105.

Add titles
Now let’s add a title.

4

Corel VideoStudio X10

1

Drag the Scrubber to the position you want.

2

Click the Title button

3

You can type directly in the Preview Window, but the easiest way
to get a professional-looking title, is to drag one of the title
thumbnails from the Library to the Title track in the Timeline.

4

You can drag the title to any position in the Title track and adjust
the duration of the title by dragging the end handles of the clip.

5

To edit the title text, double-click the title clip in the Timeline, in
the Preview Window, select the text and type new text. Keep the
text inside the box that displays near the edges of the Preview
Window (called the Title Safe area).

6

The Options panel for titles displays below the thumbnails in the
Library. Use any of the controls to format your title text. For
example, you can align the text and change the font, size, and
color.

Quick start

to the left of the Library thumbnails.

5

Apply transitions
You can add transitions between clips or between photos. Transitions
can be used to fade in or fade out or to dissolve one photo into the
next. There are many transition options to choose from.
1

In the Library, click the Transition button

.

2

Click the Gallery drop-list at the top of the Library, and choose All
if you want to see what is available.

3

Drag the thumbnail for the transition you want to the Timeline
and place it between two clips or photos.

If you want to apply the same transition between all clips and photos
in the track, in the Library, right-click the transition thumbnail, and
choose Apply current effect to video track. You will be warned about
replacing any existing transitions.

6

Corel VideoStudio X10

Add music
You can add songs from your computer by dragging a music file from
the Library to the Music track. You can also use Auto Music to choose
royalty-free music to your project.

1

On the Timeline toolbar, click the Auto Music button

1

In the Auto Music area that displays below the Library
thumbnails, experiment with different choices in the drop-lists
and click Play selected Music to listen to the selection.

2

To add your selection to the Timeline, click Add to Timeline.

3

The music is added to the Music track, and as with other clips,
you can drag it to a new position in the Timeline and trim it by
dragging the end handles.

4

To fade the music at the end of your project, click the Fade-out
button

.

in the Auto Music area.

Note that with any audio clips, or video clips that include sound, you
can control the volume of the clips. For more information about
adjusting audio, see “Audio” on page 195.

Quick start

7

Save and share
When you’re finished with your project, you can save it and share it in
a variety of ways. For this tutorial, we’ll upload it directly to the Web.
Before sharing, it’s important to save a version of your project to the
native *.vsp format. This will give you maximum flexibility if you choose
to edit your project later or if you want to output it to a different
format.
1

Click the Share tab

2

Click File > Save, choose a location from the Save in box, and
type a name in the File name box.

3

To share your video on the Web, click the Web button
, then
click YouTube, Facebook, Flickr, or Vimeo, and click Log In to sign
in to your account or to create an account. After you sign in and
approve the link between Corel VideoStudio and the account,
choose the settings you want for your video upload and click
Start.

8

to view the Share workspace.

Corel VideoStudio X10

Welcome
Welcome to Corel® VideoStudio®, the surprisingly creative videoediting software that lets you produce impressive video projects,
regardless of your skill level. Corel VideoStudio provides a complete
set of tools for capturing, editing, and sharing your video, slideshow,
and multimedia projects.
The availability of features depends on the version of the
software you have. For more information, see http://
videostudiopro.com/compare.
This section contains the following topics:
•

What’s new in Corel VideoStudio X10?

•

System requirements

•

Hardware acceleration

•

Preparing for video editing

•

Installing and uninstalling the application

•

Starting and quitting the application

•

Updating the application

•

Corel Support Services

•

About Corel

What’s new in Corel VideoStudio X10?
New creative features as well as enhancements to favorite features
means that you can create stunning videos faster in
Corel VideoStudio. The key updates are listed below.
Welcome

9

New! Mask Creator (in Ultimate)
Put the focus on key elements in your video with the new Mask
Creator. Define the area to highlight with brush and shape tools and
the powerful VideoStudio Ultimate X10 engine will detect the
movement of the object. You can fine-tune your mask to get
perfection. When you are happy with the results, the mask gets added
to the timeline. Apply popular effects to accent or cover the object or
the background, for example add blurring, a grayscale effect, boost
color and more, for a truly unique effect. For more information, see
“Working with the Mask Creator” on page 115.
New! Time Remapping
Evoke drama by playing with speed. The new Time Remapping
controls in VideoStudio make it easy to add impact with slow motion,
speed things up, temporarily freeze the action, or even reverse and
replay scenes. New Time Remapping controls puts all these controls in
one place, so you can adjust speed without having to edit multiple
movie clips and jump between windows. For more information, see
“Time remapping” on page 92.
New! Track Transparency
Track Transparency is available in the Timeline, making it easier than
ever to precisely adjust the opacity of your track to show multiple
layered clips at once. You can create a custom fade in, fade out, or
superimposed effect. For more information, see “Track transparency”
on page 120.
New! 360 Video support
Show your best angle with 360° video. VideoStudio introduces
controls to convert your 360° video to standard video for playback on
TVs and standard video players. Add your video to the Timeline and
show your audience the exact point of view you want them to see.

10

Corel VideoStudio X10

Then export it and playback as any standard movie. For more
information, see “360 video” on page 122.
New Effects! Exclusive Ultimate effects collection
With over 2,000 filters, effects, animated titles and transitions,
VideoStudio unleashes your creativity. Plus, only VideoStudio Ultimate
includes a bonus collection of premium effects loaded with 14 effects
packs, including 3 new to this release. Create beautiful titles with ease
using drag-and-drop visual effects and exciting 2D/3D elements in
NewBlue Titler Pro 1. Choose from more than 300 new amazing
particle and object effects in proDAD Adorage Effects Package Volume
9 - Particle & Object Effects. Try Boris Title Studio to create stylized 2D
or 3D titles with custom bevels, fills and styles and high-quality motion
graphics.
New! 100+ MyDVD templates
After your video is complete, give it the packaging it deserves. Burn
your projects to disc with VideoStudio MyDVD and quickly create
high-quality, personalized DVDs with menus, chapters and music. Now
with 100+ themed templates to choose from, MyDVD makes it easy to
find the style that best fits your project. Tailor templates with custom
background images, music and titles. Then quickly burn to DVD and
AVCHD disc to share with family and friends. For more information, see
the Help in MyDVD.
New! Group and ungroup clips
Timeline editing is more powerful and efficient than ever with new
grouping capabilities. Select your clips, then group or ungroup them
by simply right-clicking. After clips are grouped, it's easier than ever to
move them along the Timeline, or apply filters and effects by dragging
and dropping them on the group. For more information, see
“Grouping and ungrouping” on page 80.

Welcome

11

Enhanced! Music Library
Now it's a breeze to add ScoreFitter music tracks to your projects.
ScoreFitter tracks are now integrated into the Library, making it easy
to choose the track that best suits the mood of your video. Track
length now adjusts to the length of your video automatically. For more
information, see “Using Auto Music” on page 200.
New! Performance and file support
VideoStudio continues to keep pace with the latest formats with
expanded support for HEVC (H.265) encode for nVidia and AMD,
offering a higher compression rate, better quality and a smaller file
size. VideoStudio X10 is optimized for Intel's 7th generation processor.
New! Integrated learning and tutorials
Get help when you need it with the new Welcome book that offers
instant access to helpful tutorials. It includes Corel Discovery Center
videos to help you explore a wide range of tutorials for new and
advanced users. For more information, see “The Welcome book” on
page 31. You can also view the User Guide online and access the Corel
Knowledgebase to find answers to frequently asked questions.

System requirements
For optimal performance of Corel VideoStudio, make sure that your
system meets the recommended specifications. Note that some
formats and features require specific hardware or software (as
indicated).
•

Internet connection required for installation, registration and
updates. Registration required for product use.

•

Windows 10, Windows 8, Windows 7, 64-bit OS highly
recommended

•

Intel Core i3 or AMD A4 3.0 GHz or higher

12

Corel VideoStudio X10

•

Intel Core i5 or i7 1.06 GHz or higher required for AVCHD & Intel
Quick Sync Video support

•

Intel Core i7 or AMD Athlon A10 or higher for UHD, Multi-Camera
or 360° video

•

4 GB of RAM or higher, 8+GB highly recommended for UHD,
Multi-Camera, or 360° video

•

Minimum 256 MB VRAM, 512 MB or higher recommended for
hardware decoding acceleration

•

HEVC (H.265) support requires Windows 10 and supporting PC
hardware or graphics card

•

Minimum display resolution: 1024 x 768

•

Windows-compatible sound card

•

Minimum 8 GB HDD space for full installation

•

Digital download option available if DVD-ROM drive not available
for installation

Accessories
•

DVD burner for creating DVD and AVCHD discs

Input Options
•

Capture from DV, HDV and Digital8 camcorders or VCRs (requires
a FireWire port)

•

Capture from analog camcorders with compatible analog capture
card

•

Capture from USB capture devices, PC cameras, webcams

•

Import from AVCHD and other file-based camcorders, digital still
cameras, mobile devices and discs

Product specifications are subject to change without notice or
obligation.
For more details, visit: www.videostudiopro.com
Welcome

13

Supported file formats
The supported file formats are listed below. Please review release
notes for any updates to supported files or visit
www.videostudiopro.com for the latest list in the system requirements
section.

Import Formats
•

Video: AVCHD, DV, HDV, AVI, MPEG-1/-2/-4, DVR-MS, DivX*,
SWF*, UIS, UISX, M2T, M2TS, TOD, MOD, M4V, WebM, 3GP, WMV,
Non-encrypted DVD titles, MOV (H.264), MKV, XAVC, MXF**,
HEVC (H.265)

•

360° Video: Equirectangular format

•

Audio: AC3, MP3, MPA, MOV, WAV, WMA, MP4, M4A, Aiff, AU,
CDA, AMR, AAC, OGG

•

Image: BMP, CLP, CUR, EPS, FAX, FPX, GIF87a, IFF, IMG, JP2, JPC,
JPG, MAC, MPO, PCT, PIC, PNG, PSD, PXR, RAS, SCT, SHG, TGA,
TIF/TIFF, UFO, UFP, WMF, PSPImage, Camera RAW, 001, DCS, DCX,
ICO, MSP, PBM, PCX, PGM, PPM, SCI, WBM, WBMP

Export Formats
•

Video: AVCHD, DV, HDV, AVI, MPEG-1/-2/-4, UIS, UISX, M2T,
WebM, 3GP, HEVC (H.265), WMV

•

Device: Apple iPod/iPhone/iPad/TV, Sony PSP/PS3/PS4, Nintendo
Wii, Microsoft Xbox compatible formats

•

Audio: AC3, M4A, OGG, WAV, WMA

•

Image: BMP, JPG

Blu-ray Support
•

Requires purchase of a separate plug-in from within the product

•

Requires Blu-ray Disc reader and/or burner

14

Corel VideoStudio X10

*MOV, DivX & SWF: QuickTime driver for MOV, DivX codec for DivX
and Flash player for SWF are required to enable these formats.
**VideoStudio Ultimate only

Hardware acceleration
Depending on your hardware specifications, Corel VideoStudio lets
you optimize the performance of your system by optimizing hardware
acceleration.
Hardware decoder and encoder acceleration is supported only
by Windows Vista and later versions of the Windows operating
system software and requires at least 512 MB of VRAM.

To change hardware acceleration settings
1

Select Settings > Preferences [F6].

2

Click the Performance tab and select the following options under
Editing Process and File Creation:
• Enable Hardware Decoder acceleration — enhances editing
performance and improves clip and project playback by using
video graphics acceleration technologies of the computer’s
available hardware
• Enable Hardware Encoder acceleration — improves the
rendering time required for producing your movies
Note: For optimum performance, VGA cards must support
DXVA2 VLD mode with Vertex and Pixel Shader 2.0 or later.
If you want the program to automatically detect the hardware
acceleration capabilities of your system and determine the
optimum settings, select all hardware acceleration options in
Performance Optimization, including Enable hardware
acceleration optimization.

Welcome

15

If the feature is not supported by your system, some hardware
acceleration options will be grayed out.

Preparing for video editing
Video editing tasks require a lot of computer resources. Your computer
must be properly set up to ensure successful capturing and smooth
video editing. Below are some tips on how to prepare and optimize
your computer before you launch Corel VideoStudio.
•

It is recommended that you close other applications when
working with Corel VideoStudio. To avoid interruptions while
capturing, it is best to turn off any automatically launched
software.

•

If you have two hard drives in your system, it is recommended
that you install Corel VideoStudio to your system drive (usually C:)
and store captured videos on your other drive.

•

It is recommended that you store video files on a dedicated hard
drive.

•

Increase the Paging File (Swap File) size to twice your amount of
RAM.

When you are in Corel VideoStudio, you can choose settings that let
you balance the quality of the playback and the speed of the
application. For example, is your playback fast but fuzzy? Or is your
playback too slow? The tips below can help you find the right settings
in Corel VideoStudio.
•

Clearer, higher quality playback is available if your computer
system meets or exceeds the recommended system requirements.
You can work with HD projects and you can preview your project
in HD. For more information, see “Setting project properties” on
page 55 and “Previewing your project or clips” on page 58.

•

To speed up less powerful systems, consider using Smart Proxy
and review the hardware acceleration options. For more

16

Corel VideoStudio X10

information, see “Using Smart Proxy for a faster, smoother editing
experience” on page 57 and “Hardware acceleration” on page 15.

Installing and uninstalling the application
You can install Corel VideoStudio from a disc or from installation files
that you download.

To install Corel VideoStudio
1

Close any open applications.

2

Insert the DVD in the DVD drive or double-click the associated
.exe file that you downloaded.
If the disc-initiated setup does not start automatically, navigate to
the DVD drive on your computer, and double-click Setup.exe.

3

Follow the instructions on your screen.
Note: In addition to Corel VideoStudio, you might be prompted
to install supporting Windows extensions and third-party
programs and drivers.

To uninstall Corel VideoStudio
1

Open the Windows Control Panel.

2

In the Programs category, click the Uninstall a program link.

3

In the Programs and Features window, click Corel
VideoStudio X10 in the list of applications.

4

Click Uninstall/Change.

5

Follow the instructions on your screen.

Starting and quitting the application
You can start Corel VideoStudio from the Windows desktop or Start
menu, and quit the program from the application window.

Welcome

17

To start the application
•

From the Windows Start menu or Start screen, choose Corel
VideoStudio X10.

To quit the application
•

Click the Close button
application window.

in the upper-right corner of the

Updating the application
You can check for and install product updates. Updates provide
important new information about your application.

To update the application
•

Choose Help > Check for Updates.

Corel Support Services
Corel Support Services can provide you with prompt and accurate
information about product features, specifications, pricing, availability,
services, and technical support options. For the most current
information on available support and professional services for your
Corel product, please visit www.corel.com/support.

About Corel
Corel is one of the world's top software companies, boasting some of
the industry's best-known graphics, productivity and digital media
products. We've built a reputation for giving customers more choice,
and delivering solutions that are easy to learn and use. Our mission is
simple: help people achieve new levels of creativity and productivity.
Corel's product lines include CorelDRAW® Graphics Suite, Corel®
Painter®, Corel®PaintShop® Pro, Corel® VideoStudio®,
MindManager®, Pinnacle Studio™, ReviverSoft®, Roxio Creator®,
18

Corel VideoStudio X10

Roxio® Toast™ and WinZip®. For more information on Corel, please
visit www.corel.com.

Welcome

19

20

Corel VideoStudio X10

Learning resources
You can learn how to use Corel VideoStudio in various ways: by
searching the Help or the user guide, by accessing video tutorials in
the Welcome tab, or by exploring the Corel website (www.corel.com).
This section contains the following topics:
•

Documentation conventions

•

Using the Help system

•

Corel VideoStudio X10 User Guide PDF

•

Understanding VideoStudio terminology

•

Learning with video tutorials

•

Using Web-based resources

Documentation conventions
The following table describes important conventions used in the Help.
Convention Description

Example

Menu
>Menu
command

A menu item followed by a
menu command

Click Settings >
Preferences > Edit.

drop-list

A list of options that drops
down when a user clicks a
down arrow button

Select a profile from the
Profile drop-list.

Learning resources

21

Convention Description

Example

A note containing
information that is
important to the preceding
steps. It may describe
conditions under which the
procedure can be
performed.

Enable Flatten audio and
background video if your
browser can only support
a single track for audio
and video.

A tip containing
suggestions for performing
the preceding steps. It may
present alternatives to the
steps, or other benefits and
uses of the procedure.

For best results, use a
tripod when you shoot
photos and videos that
you want to use in your
stop motion animation
project.

Using the Help system
The Help that is available from within the program is the most
comprehensive source of information for Corel VideoStudio. The Help
system provides two ways to find information. You can choose a topic
from the Contents page, or use the Search page to search for specific
words and phrases. You can also print topics from the Help.
An Internet connection is required to view the Help. If you work offline
on a regular basis, you can download a PDF copy of the information
(Help > User Guide (PDF)).

To use the Help system
1

Do one of the following:
• Click Help > Help topics.
• Press F1.

2

In the Help window, click one of the following tabs:
• Contents — lets you browse through topics in the Help

22

Corel VideoStudio X10

• Search — lets you search the full text of the Help for a particular
word or phrase (enclosed in quotation marks). For example, if
you are looking for information about a specific tool or
command, you can type the name of the tool or command,
such as Trimming, to display a list of relevant topics.

Corel VideoStudio X10 User Guide PDF
You can view the Corel VideoStudio X10 User Guide PDF online or you
can download it to your computer or tablet. At any time, you can print
the pages you want. You can find the PDF in Help menu (Help > User
Guide (PDF)).

Understanding VideoStudio terminology
Learn more about the language of video editing. We created a list of
the most common video editing terms used in Corel VideoStudio to
help you out. What is a scrubber and what does rendering mean? Find
out by reading the “Glossary” on page 297.

Learning with video tutorials
The Welcome tab includes access to learning material, such as video
tutorials (English only for some video content), as well as free and paid
content to help you expand your project options in VideoStudio.

Learning resources

23

You can also visit www.youtube.com/VideoStudioPro for more
tutorials.

To open the Discovery Center window
•

Choose Help  Video Tutorials.

Using Web-based resources
From the Corel VideoStudio Help menu and the Corel website, you
can access a number of Web pages dedicated to customer support
and communities. You can find resources such as tutorials, tips,
newsgroups, downloads, and other online resources.

To access Corel VideoStudio Web resources
• Use your Internet browser to go to www.videostudiopro.com/
learn for tutorials, community forums, and other resources
• Visit VideoStudio Facebook postings: https://
www.facebook.com/corelvideostudio

24

Corel VideoStudio X10

Workspace tour
Corel VideoStudio has three workspaces: Capture, Edit, and Share.
These workspaces are based on the key steps in the video-editing
process. The customizable workspaces let you rearrange the panels to
suit your preferences and ensure that you have everything you need
at a glance.
This section presents the following topics:
•

Exploring the workspaces

•

Switching between workspaces

•

The Welcome book

•

Using the Player panel

•

Using the toolbar

•

Customizing the workspace

Exploring the workspaces
Corel VideoStudio Pro consists of three main workspaces, and a
Welcome tab.
•

Capture

•

Edit

•

Share

Each workspace contains specific tools and controls to help you
accomplish the task at hand quickly and efficiently.
For more information about the Welcome tab, see “The Welcome
book” on page 31.
Workspace tour

25

You can customize the size and position of the elements on your
screen for full control of your editing environment. For information
about using a custom workspace layout, see “Customizing the
workspace” on page 36.
The Capture workspace
Media clips can be recorded or imported directly to your computer's
hard drive. This step allows you to capture and import video, photo,
and audio clips.

1

2

4

3

5

6

The Capture workspace consists of the following components:
1. Menu bar — provides various commands for customizing
Corel VideoStudio, opening and saving movie projects, working with
individual clips, and more.

26

Corel VideoStudio X10

2. Preview Window — shows the current video being played in the
Player panel.
3. Library panel — a storage depot for captured media clips.
4. Navigation area — provides buttons for playback and for precision
trimming in the Player panel.
5. Information panel — lets you view information about the files you
are working with.
6. Capture Options — displays different media capture and import
methods.
The Edit workspace
When you open Corel VideoStudio Pro, the Edit workspace appears as
your default workspace. The Edit workspace and the Timeline are the
heart of Corel VideoStudio Pro, where you can arrange, edit, trim, and
add effects to your video clips.

Workspace tour

27

1

2

4

3

5

6

The Edit workspace consists of the following components:
1. Menu bar — provides various commands for customizing
Corel VideoStudio, opening and saving movie projects, working with
individual clips, and more.
2. Preview Window — shows the current video being played in the
Player panel.
3. Library panel — a storage depot for everything you need to create
a movie, including sample video, photo, and music clips, and your
imported clips. It also includes templates, transitions, titles, graphics,
filters, and paths. The Options area opens in the Library panel.
4. Navigation area — provides buttons for playback and for precision
trimming in the Player panel.

28

Corel VideoStudio X10

5. Toolbar — lets you choose from a variety of functions related to
content in the Timeline.
6. Timeline panel — The Timeline is where you assemble the media
clips for your video project. For more information, see “Timeline” on
page 75.
The Share workspace
The Share workspace lets you save and share your finished movie.

1

2

5

3

4

6

The Share workspace consists of the following components:
1. Menu bar — provides various commands for customizing
Corel VideoStudio, opening and saving movie projects, working with
individual clips, and more.
2. Preview Window — shows the current video being played in the
Player panel.

Workspace tour

29

3. Category selection area — lets you choose between Computer,
Device, Web, Disc, and 3D movies output categories. For HTML5
projects, you can choose HTML5 and Corel VideoStudio project.
4. Format area — provides a selection of file formats, profiles, and
descriptions. For Web sharing, it displays the settings for your account.
5. Navigation area — provides buttons for playback and for precision
trimming in the Player panel.
6. Information area — lets you view the information about the output
location and provides an estimate of the file size.

Switching between workspaces
Corel VideoStudio simplifies the process of creating movies by
organizing the controls you need into three workspaces that
correspond to the different steps in the video-editing process.
Media clips can be recorded or imported
directly to your computer's hard drive in the
Capture workspace. This workspace allows you
to capture and import video, photo, and audio
clips.
The Edit workspace includes the Timeline. This
is the heart of Corel VideoStudio, where you
can arrange, edit, trim and add effects to your
video clips.
The Share workspace lets you save and share
your movie. You can save your video file, burn it
to a disc, or upload it to the Web.

To switch between workspaces
•

30

At the top of the application window, click one of the following
tabs:
• Capture
Corel VideoStudio X10

• Edit
• Share

The Welcome book
The Welcome book is accessed from the Welcome tab.

In the Welcome book, you’ll find
•

Video tutorials

•

Content offerings (free and paid)

•

Update information

•

Information about other resources

Review the Welcome book regularly to see what’s new.
The Welcome book is set as the default tab when you open the
application. You can adjust your default startup page in Settings >
Preferences, and on the General tab, choose a Default startup page.
Note that the Welcome book page might still display on startup if
important updates are available.

Using the Player panel
The Player panel consists of the Preview window and the Navigation
area, which provides buttons for playback and for precision trimming
of clips. Use the controls in the Navigation area to move around a
selected clip or your project. Use the Trim Markers and Scrubber to
edit your clips. In the Capture workspace, this panel also acts as the
device control for a DV or HDV camcorder.

Workspace tour

31

1

2
The Player panel consists of the 1. Preview Window
and the 2. Navigation area

The Navigation area
The table below describes the controls available in the Navigation
area.

32

Part

Description

Scrubber

Lets you scrub through the
project or clip.

Trim Markers

Lets you drag the scrubbers to set
a preview range in the project or
to trim a clip.

Project/Clip
mode

Specifies a preview of the entire
project or of a selected clip.

Play

Plays, pauses, or resumes the
current project or a selected clip.

Home

Returns to the starting segment or
cue.

Previous

Moves to the previous frame.

Corel VideoStudio X10

Part

Description

Next

Moves to the next frame.

End

Moves to the end segment or cue.

Repeat

Loops playback.

System
Volume

Lets you adjust the volume of
your computer's speakers by
dragging a slider.

HD Preview

Lets you preview high definition
clips and projects.

Timecode

Lets you jump directly to a part of
your project or selected clip by
specifying the exact timecode.

Enlarge
Preview
Window

Increases the size of the Preview
Window.

Split Clip

Splits the selected clip. Position
the Scrubber to where you want
the clip to be split, and then click
this button.

Mark-in and
Mark-out

Sets a preview range in the
project, or sets the start and end
points for trimming a clip.

The Play button in the Navigation area serves two purposes: for
playback of your entire project or a selected clip.

To preview projects or clips
•

Click Project or Clip, then click Play.

Workspace tour

33

While working on your project, you will want to preview your work
frequently to see how your project is progressing. Instant Playback
allows you to quickly preview changes in your project. Playback quality
will be dependent on your computer’s resources.
You may choose to play only a part of your project. The
selected range of frames to preview is referred to as the
preview range, and it is marked as a colored bar in the Ruler
Panel.

To play the trimmed range only
1

Use the Trim Markers or the Mark-in/out buttons to select the
preview range.

2

To preview the selected range, select what you want to preview
(Project or Clip), then click Play. To preview the entire clip, hold
[Shift], then click Play.

Using the toolbar
The toolbar provides easy access to many editing commands. You can
change your project view, zoom in and out on the Timeline, and
launch different tools that can help you edit efficiently.

34

Part

Description

Storyboard
View

Displays your media
thumbnails in chronological
order.

Corel VideoStudio X10

Workspace tour

Part

Description

Timeline View

Lets you perform frameaccurate editing of your clips
on separate tracks, add and
position other elements such as
titles, overlays, voice-over and
music.

Undo

Undoes the last action.

Redo

Repeats the last action that was
undone.

Record/
Capture
Option

Shows the Record/Capture
Option panel, where you can
capture videos, import files,
record voice-overs and take
snapshots.

Sound Mixer

Launches the Surround Sound
Mixer and the multitrack Audio
Timeline, which lets you
customize your audio settings.

Auto Music

Launches the Auto Music
Options Panel for adding
background music to your
project in a variety of styles and
moods. You can set the music
to match the duration of your
project.

Track Motion

Launches the Track Motion
dialog box, which lets you
create tracking paths of
particular elements in selected
video clips.

35

Part

Description

Subtitle Editor

Launches the Subtitle Editor
dialog box, which lets you
detect and organize segments
to easily add titles in selected
video clips.

Multi-Camera
Editor

Launches the Multi-Camera
Editor and imports any of the
selected media.

Time
Remapping

Launches the Time Remapping
dialog box, which lets you use
speed controls to slow down,
speed up, reverse, or freeze
frames in a video clip.

Mask Creator

Launches the Mask Creator
dialog box, which lets you
create video and still masks.

Zoom in and
Zoom out

Lets you adjust your view of the
Timeline by using the zoom
slider and buttons.

Fit Project in
Timeline
Window

Adjusts your project view to fit
the entire span of your
Timeline.

Project
Duration

Shows the total duration of the
project.

Customizing the workspace
The new workspace is designed to provide you with a better editing
experience. You can now customize the size of the program window
and change the size and position of the elements on your screen for
full control of your editing environment.

36

Corel VideoStudio X10

Each panel behaves like an independent window that can be modified
according to your editing preferences. This is very useful when you are
using large displays or dual monitors.

1
3

2

The main panels are:
1. Player panel — Contains the Preview Window and Navigation area.
2. Timeline panel — Contains the Toolbar and Timeline.
3. Library panel — Contains the media library and the Options area.

To move a panel
•

Double-click the top-left corner of the Player Panel, Timeline
Panel or Library Panel.
When the panel is active, you can minimize, maximize, or resize
each panel.
You can also drag the panel outside the main application
window into the second display area for dual-monitor setups.

Workspace tour

37

To customize the size of the program window
•

You can do one of the following:
• Click the Restore button and drag the ends of the program
window to the desired size.
• Click the

Maximize button for full screen editing.

To dock a panel
1

Click and hold an active panel.
The docking guide appears.

2

Drag your mouse over the docking guide and choose a docking
position to snap the panel in place.

To save a custom workspace layout
•

Click Settings > Layout Settings > Save to and click a Custom
option.

To load a custom workspace layout
•

Click Settings > Layout Settings > Switch to and choose Default
or one of the custom settings you have saved.
To know more about hotkey combinations assigned for each
preset, see “Layout settings shortcuts” on page 310.

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Corel VideoStudio X10

You can also change the layout settings from the UI Layout tab
in Settings > Preferences.

To set program preferences
•

Click Settings > Preferences or press F6 to launch the Preferences
dialog box.

Workspace tour

39

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Corel VideoStudio X10

Capture and import
Corel VideoStudio lets you capture or import video from DVD-video,
AVCHD and BDMV discs including camcorders that record on
memory cards, internal memory of discs, DV or HDV camcorders,
mobile devices, as well as analog and digital TV capture devices.
This section contains the following topics:
•

Using the Options panel in the Capture workspace

•

Capturing videos and photos

•

Capturing digital video (DV)

•

Using DV Quick Scan

•

Capturing analog video

•

Importing from digital media

•

Scanning and splitting scenes

Using the Options panel in the Capture workspace
In the Capture workspace, Corel VideoStudio displays the Library and
the capture Options panel where different media capture and import
methods are available.
The table below discusses the options in the Capture workspace.
Click Capture Video to import video footage and photos
from your camcorder to your computer.
Click DV Quick Scan to scan your DV tape and select the
scenes.

Capture and import

41

Click Import from Digital Media to add media clips from
a DVD-Video, AVCHD, BDMV formatted disc or from your
hard drive. This feature also allows you to import video
directly from AVCHD, Blu-ray Disc or DVD camcorders.
Click Stop Motion to create instant stop motion
animations using captured images from your photos and
video capture devices.
Click Screen Capture to create screen capture videos that
capture all computer actions and elements shown on your
screen.

Capturing videos and photos
The steps on how to capture are similar for all types of camcorders
except for the available capture settings in the Capture Video Options
panel that can be selected for each type of source.
The Capture Video Options panel consists of the following
components:
•

Duration — Sets the length of time for the capture.

•

Source — Displays the detected capture device and lists other
capture devices installed on your computer.

•

Format — Gives you a list of options where you select a file
format for saving your captured video.

•

File name — Allows you to specify a prefix for captured files.

•

Capture folder — Allows you to specify a location for captured
files.

•

Split by scene — Automatically separates captured video into
several files based on changes in shooting date and time.

•

Capture to library — Choose or create a Library folder where you
want your video to be saved.

•

Options — Displays a menu allowing you to modify your capture
settings.

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Corel VideoStudio X10

•

Capture Video — Transfers video from your source to your hard
drive.

•

Take a Snapshot — Captures the displayed video frame as a
photo.

To capture video clips and photos from your camcorder
1

Connect your camcorder to your computer and turn on the
device. Set it to Play (or VTR / VCR) mode.

2

In Capture Options Panel, click Capture Video.

3

Select your capture device from the Source drop-list.

4

Select a file format from the Format drop-list. In the Capture
folder box, type a folder location or mark the Capture to library
check box and choose a folder from the drop-list.
Note: Click Options to customize capture settings specific to
your video device.

5

Scan your video to search the part for capture.
Note: If you are capturing video from a DV or HDV camcorder,
use the Navigation area to play your video tape.

6

Click Capture Video, when your video for capture is already on
cue. Click Stop Capture or press [Esc] to stop capturing.

7

To capture a photo from the video footage, pause the video on
the desired frame then click Take a Snapshot.
Note: When your camcorder is in Record mode (usually named
CAMERA or MOVIE), you can capture live video.
Note: The available settings in the Video properties dialog box
vary, depending on the capture file format that you have chosen.

To capture videos and photos using a DSLR
1

Connect your DSLR to your computer and turn on the device.

2

Click Capture Video and select your device from the Source
drop-list.

Capture and import

43

3

Specify a folder location for your saved files by clicking the
Capture Folder button

.

4

Click Capture Video to start recording. Click Stop Capture or
press [Esc] to stop capturing.

5

To capture a photo while the DSLR is connected to the computer,
click Take a snapshot.

To capture video from an HDV camcorder
1

Connect your HDV camcorder to your computer’s IEEE-1394 port
using the IEEE-1394 cable.

2

Turn on your camcorder and switch it to Play/Edit mode and
make sure that your HDV camcorder is switched to HDV mode.
Note: For Sony HDV camcorders, flip open the LCD screen and
see if HDVout I-Link is on the LCD screen to check if the camera is
set to HDV mode. If you see DVout I-Link, press P-MENU at the
lower right of the screen. In the menu, press MENU > STANDARD
SET > VCR HDV/DV and press HDV.

3

In the Capture workspace, click Capture Video

.

To capture DVB-T video
1

In the Capture workspace, click Capture Video
.
Note: Before capturing, ensure that the DVB-T source is
connected via a compatible capture card installed on your
computer.

2

Select Digital TV Source from the Source drop-list.

3

Click Options and select Video Properties. The Video properties
dialog box will appear.

4

In the Input Source tab, select TV from the Input source drop-list.
Click OK.

5

In Channel List, click Start Scan to start scanning for channels.

44

Corel VideoStudio X10

Note: DVB-T channels are not automatically scanned. Make sure
to manually scan the channels first before capturing.
6

Click Capture Video.

7

Click Yes when prompted if you want to start capturing and
automatically recovering DVB-T video.

8

Follow the remaining steps as described in the procedure for
capturing videos.

To capture TV footage
1

Select your TV tuner device from the Source drop-list.

2

Click Options > Video Properties to open the Video properties
dialog box. If needed, adjust the settings accordingly.
Click the Tuner Information tab to choose Antenna or Cable, scan
available channels in your region, and more.

3

In the Channel box, specify the channel number from which to
capture.

To capture video in MPEG-2 format
1

In Source, choose your video source.

2

Specify or browse for the destination folder where you want your
clips to be stored in Capture folder.

3

Click Options and select Video properties. In the dialog box that
opens, select a profile in the Current Profile drop-list.

4

Click OK.

5

Click Capture Video to start capturing and Stop Capture to end
your capturing session. Your media clip will be stored as MPEG-2
format in the folder you specified.

Capture and import

45

Capturing digital video (DV)
To capture Digital Video (DV) in its native format, select DV from the
Format list in the Options Panel. This saves the captured video as a DV
AVI file (.avi).
You can also use the DV Quick Scan option to capture DV video
DV AVI Type-1 and Type-2.
When capturing DV, click Options in the Options Panel and select
Video properties to open a menu. In the Current Profile, choose
whether to capture DV as DV Type-1 or DV Type-2.

Using DV Quick Scan
Use this option to scan a DV device for scenes to import. You can add
the date and time of your video.
For more information on this feature, see “DV-to-DVD Wizard” on
page 313.

To add the date and time of your video
1

After scanning your DV tape, click Next.
This will then display the Import Settings dialog box.

2

Select Insert to Timeline and choose Add video date information
as title.
Note: If you want the shooting date to appear for the duration of
the video, select Entire video. If you only want a portion of the
video, select Duration and specify the number of seconds.

Capturing analog video
When footage is captured from analog sources such as VHS, S-VHS,
Video-8, or Hi8 camcorders/VCRs, it is converted to a digital format
that can be read and stored by the computer. Before capturing, choose
46

Corel VideoStudio X10

the desired file format to use for saving the captured video in the
Options Panel’s Format list.

To specify the type of video source you are capturing from
1

In the Capture workspace, click Options and select Video
properties.

2

In the dialog box that opens, you can customize the following
capture settings:
• In the Input Source tab, choose whether you are capturing
NTSC, PAL, or SECAM video and select the Input source (TV,
Composite, or S-Video).
• In the Color Manager tab, you can fine tune the video source to
ensure good quality captures.
• In the Template tab, choose the frame size and compression
method to use for saving the captured video.

Importing from digital media
You can import DVD, AVCHD, BDMV video and photos from a disc,
hard drive, memory card and digital camcorders.

To import digital media
1

In the Capture workspace, click Import from Digital Media.

2

Click Select Import Source Folders and browse for folders that
contain your digital media and click OK.

3

Click Start and the Import from Digital Media dialog box appears.

Capture and import

47

4

Choose the media clips you want to import and click Start import.
All imported videos will be added to the thumbnail list in the
Library.

To enable timecode retrieval for AVCHD
1

In the Capture workspace, click Import from Digital Media.

2

Select the file location from the Select Import Source Folders list
and click Start.

3

Choose the media clips you want to import and click Start import
to launch Import Settings.

4

In Import Destination, select Insert to Timeline or select Add
video date information as title.

5

Choose Entire video to import the timecode of the video file as a
title spanning the entire duration of the video. Choose Duration
to import the timecode as a title within a specified duration. Click
OK to apply the settings.
Note: You can apply the same settings to all the videos that you
import and hide the Import Settings dialog box by marking the
Apply this setting and never ask me again check box. You can

48

Corel VideoStudio X10

also choose to enable the same check box on the Capture tab of
the Program preferences dialog box. For more information, see
“Customizing the workspace” on page 36.

Scanning and splitting scenes
A single DV tape may contain video that was captured at different
times. Corel VideoStudio automatically detects these segments and
saves them as separate files.

To find scenes in your video
•

Drag the Shuttle Slider to move forward and back through the
footage at variable speeds.

To use Split by scene
1

In the Capture workspace, click Capture Video.

2

Enable Split by scene on the Capture Video Options Panel.
Corel VideoStudio will automatically look for the scenes according
to their shooting date and time and capture them as separate
files.

Capture and import

49

50

Corel VideoStudio X10

Project basics
Corel VideoStudio combines the video, titles, sounds, and effects in a
process called rendering. Project settings determine how your movie
project is rendered when you preview it. The output video can then
be played back on your computer, burned to disc, or uploaded to the
Internet.
This section contains the following topics:
•

Creating new projects and opening projects

•

Using Instant Project templates

•

Setting project properties

•

Creating custom profiles

•

Using Smart Proxy for a faster, smoother editing experience

•

Previewing your project or clips

•

Undoing and redoing actions

•

Showing and hiding grid lines

•

Saving projects

•

Saving projects by using Smart Package

•

Adding cues and chapters

Creating new projects and opening projects
When you start Corel VideoStudio, it automatically opens a new
project and lets you start creating your movie. New projects are
always based on the default settings of the application. You can also
create HTML5 projects that you can post on the Web.

Project basics

51

You can open previously saved projects and if you’d like to combine
several projects, you can add previously saved projects to a new
project.

To create a new project
•

Click File >New Project [Ctrl + N].

To create a new HTML5 project
•

Click File > New HTML5 Project [Ctrl + M].

To create a new FastFlick project
1

Click Tools > FastFlick.

2

From the FastFlick window, click Menu > New Project.

For more information, see “FastFlick” on page 223.

To open an existing project
•

Click File > Open Project [Ctrl + O].

To add an existing project to a new project
1

In the Library, click the Media button

2

Drag a project file (.vsp) from the Library to the Timeline.

.

If the file isn’t in the Library, click the Import Media Files button,
navigate to a project file (stored in My Projects folder by default),
select the file, and click Open.
All tracks, media, and elements of the project appear in the
Timeline.
Before you import a project (VSP file) to the Library, ensure that
all links in the project are working. Projects with linking issues
cannot be added to existing projects.
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Corel VideoStudio X10

If you want to flatten the project to add it to a specific track,
press and hold the Shift key before you release the mouse
button.

Using Instant Project templates
Instant Project templates let you fast-track the movie creation process
by providing you with pre-assembled movie projects. Simply exchange
the placeholder clips and photos with your own media and you’re
done. They are also a great way to learn about the components of a
movie project.
You can use one template for the entire movie, or you can add more
than one template. For example, you can use different templates for
the start, middle, and end of your movie. You can even create and save
custom templates. For example, if you are creating a series of videos,
you can create a template so that all the videos have a consistent style.

To open an Instant Project template
1

In the Edit workspace, click the Instant Project button
Library panel.

2

Click a template category from the folders that appear.

3

To preview a template, click the template thumbnail, and click the
Play

Project basics

in the

in the Player panel.

53

4

Right-click the template thumbnail and choose the point of
insertion in the Timeline between Add at the beginning and Add
at the end.
The template is added to the Timeline.
You can also add a template to your project by dragging the
thumbnail to the Timeline.

To replace clips, photos, and music in an Instant Project
template
1

Drag a clip, photo, or music track from the Library to the
appropriate placeholder clip, photo, or music track.

2

Press [Ctrl] and release the mouse button.

To create an Instant Project template
1

Open the video project that you want to save as a template.

2

Click File > Export as template.

3

Click Yes when prompted to save your project.

4

Enter a File name, Subject and Description.

5

Browse for the folder where you want to save your template and
click Save.

6

In the Export project as template dialog box, move the slider to
display the thumbnail that you want to use for the template.

7

Specify the path and folder name. Choose the category from the
drop-list where you want to keep your template.
Template details will also be displayed.

8

54

Click OK.

Corel VideoStudio X10

To import project templates
1

Click Import a project template and browse for the *.vpt file that
you want to import.

2

Click Open.

Setting project properties
Project Properties serve as your template for your movie projects. The
project settings in the Project Properties dialog box determine the
appearance and quality of a project when it is previewed on-screen.
The project properties are based on a profile. You can use an existing
profile or create a custom profile. For more information about custom
profiles, see “Creating custom profiles” on page 55.

To modify project properties
1

Click Settings > Project Properties.

2

Choose the appropriate setting options in the Project Properties
dialog box.

3

Click OK.
When customizing project settings, it is recommended that you
make the settings the same as the attributes of the video
footage that will be captured to avoid distorting the video
images and can help prevent jumping frames. However,
preview performance might decrease for projects with high
resolution files, depending on the system specifications.

Creating custom profiles
Profiles contain settings that define how to create the final movie file.
By using the preset profiles provided by Corel VideoStudio or by
creating and saving your own profiles in the Movie Profile Manager,

Project basics

55

you can have multiple versions of your final movie. For example, you
can create profiles that provide high-quality output for DVD and video
recording, and you can create profiles that output to smaller, lowerquality files ideal for Web streaming and e-mail distribution.
You can also choose profiles and create custom profiles in the Share
workspace before you output your movie project. For more
information, see “Working with custom profiles in the Share
workspace” on page 275.

To create custom profiles
1

Click Settings > Movie Profile Manager. The Movie Profile
Manager dialog box opens.

2

Click the Computer or 3D tab.

3

From the Format drop-list, choose a file format.

4

Click New.

5

In the New Profile Options dialog box, click the
Corel VideoStudio tab, and type a name in the Profile name box.

6

Click the General tab, and choose the settings you want.
Note: Additional tabs and settings are available depending on
the type of format you choose.

7

Click OK.

To choose a custom profile for your project
1

Click Settings > Movie Profile Manager. The Movie Profile
Manager dialog box opens.

2

Click the Computer or 3D tab.

3

From the Format drop-list, choose a file format.

4

In the Profile area, choose Personal Profiles from the drop-list.
Previously saved custom profiles are listed in the box below the
drop-list.

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Corel VideoStudio X10

5

Click the profile you want, and click Close.

Using Smart Proxy for a faster, smoother editing
experience
The main purpose of Smart Proxy is to provide a more fluid editing
and previewing experience when working with large, high resolution
video files.
Smart Proxy creates lower resolution working copies of larger source
files. These smaller files are called “proxy” files. Using proxy files
speeds up editing of high resolution projects (for example, projects
that have HDV and AVCHD source files).
Proxy files are source-dependent rather than project-dependent. In
other words, proxy files can be shared among different projects.
When you render a video project, the original, high-quality video
source files are used.
You can use the Smart Proxy Manager to enable or disable Smart
Proxy, change the default resolution threshold that enables Smart
Proxy, and access the Smart Proxy File Manager and Smart Proxy
Queue Manager to manage existing and future proxy files.
Smart Proxy can be set and adjusted in the VideoStudio workspaces or
in the Multi-Camera Editor.

To enable or disable Smart Proxy
•

Click the Settings menu or button (Multi-Camera Editor)
Smart Proxy Manager > Enable Smart Proxy.
Note: The Smart Proxy feature is enabled by default if the
computer’s hardware can support the feature.

Project basics

>

57

To set the resolution threshold and location for Smart
Proxy files
1

Select Settings > Smart Proxy Manager > Settings.

2

In the Smart Proxy dialog box, set a resolution threshold for the
creation of proxy files and choose a proxy folder.

To manage proxy files
1

Select Settings > Smart Proxy Manager, and choose one of the
following options:
• Smart Proxy File Manager — Lists the source and proxy files.
You can use this manager to delete proxy files you no longer
need.
• Smart Proxy Queue Manager — Lists source files for which
proxy files will be generated (according to the current settings)

Previewing your project or clips
The Play button in the Navigation area of the Player panel serves two
purposes:
•

Playback your entire project

•

Playback a selected clip

While working on your project, you will want to preview your work
frequently to see how your project is progressing. Instant Playback
allows you to quickly preview changes in your project. Playback quality
depends on your computer’s resources.
You may choose to play only a part of your project. The selected range
of frames to preview is referred to as the preview range, and it is
marked as a colored bar on the Ruler Panel.
If you have a high definition project (HD), you can enable HD Preview
so that you can preview your project with a clearer, higher quality
result. The speed depends on your system.
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Corel VideoStudio X10

To preview a project or clip
1

In the Navigation area of the Player panel, click Project or Clip.

2

Click Play.
Note: For Clip, only the currently selected clip plays.

If you want to preview a high definition project in full HD, enable
the HD Preview button.

To play part of a project or clip
1

Use the Trim Markers or the Mark-in/out buttons to select the
preview range.

2

With the preview range selected, in the Navigation area of the
Player panel, click Project or Clip.

3

Click Play.

Undoing and redoing actions
You can undo or redo the last set of actions that you performed while
working on your movie.
Project basics

59

To undo the last action
•

Click the Undo button

on the Toolbar.

To redo the last undone action
•

Click the Redo button

on the Toolbar.

You can adjust the number of undo levels in the Preferences
dialog box.
You can also use the keyboard shortcuts [Ctrl + Z] and [Ctrl +
Y] to undo and redo actions respectively.

Showing and hiding grid lines
You can use grid lines to guide you when repositioning or resizing
photos and videos. You can also use grid lines to line up titles in your
movie.

To show grid lines
1

In the Edit step, double-click a clip to display the Options Panel.

2

Click the Attribute tab and choose Distort clip.

3

Check Show grid lines.

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Corel VideoStudio X10

Click

to adjust grid line settings.

Saving projects
You can save projects so that you can edit or complete them later. To
protect your work, you can enable automatic saving at regular
intervals.

To save your project
•

Click File > Save [Ctrl + S].
Note: Corel VideoStudio project files are saved in *.vsp file
format. HTML5 video projects are saved in *.vsh file format.

To automatically save your work
1

Click Settings > Preferences and click the General tab.

2

Choose Automatic save interval: and specify the time interval
between saves.
Note: This setting is set at 10 minutes by default.
Save your project frequently to avoid accidental loss of work.

Saving projects by using Smart Package
Packaging a video project is useful if you want to back up your work
or transfer your files for sharing or for editing in a laptop or another
computer. You can also package your project as a zipped folder or
prepare them for online storage using WinZip’s file compression
technology that is integrated into the Smart Package feature.

Project basics

61

To save projects by using Smart Package
1

Click File > Smart Package and choose to pack your project as a
folder or Zip file.

2

Specify the Folder path, Project folder name and Project file
name.
If you want to include tracker or disc settings, enable the
corresponding check box.

3

Click OK.
You need to save your project before you use Smart Package.

Adding cues and chapters
Adding cues and chapters helps you to navigate through a project and
allows you to place comments on your Timeline. These cue and
chapter marks are used mainly as project guides or disc menu chapters
and interactive links in HTML5 projects.
Cue points serve as markers that help in lining up media clips in a
project. Chapter points specify disc menu chapters or hyperlinks.

To add project cues
1

Click the Chapter/Cue Menu.

2

Click Cue Point.

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Corel VideoStudio X10

3

Drag the cursor to where you want to add a cue point and click
the bar below the Timeline ruler. Notice that a blue arrow icon is
added.

Cue points
Add/Remove Cue Point

Cue points
4

Repeat Step 3 to add more cue points.
Note: You can also use the Cue Point Manager when adding cue
points. Select Add and specify the timecode and name of cue for
easy identification. Click OK and then Close.
You can also add a cue point by dragging the Timeline slider
to the desired cue point position in your project and clicking
Add/Remove Cue Point.

To add chapters
1

Select Chapter Point in the Chapter/Cue Menu.

Project basics

63

2

Drag the cursor where you want to add a chapter and click the
bar below the Timeline ruler. Notice that a green arrow icon
appears to indicate chapter points in your movie.

Chapter points
3

To edit a chapter, click on a chapter point and drag to a new
position.

4

To rename a chapter, double click a chapter point and enter a new
chapter name. Click OK.
To remove chapters and cues, drag the markers outside the
Timeline ruler and release the mouse button. You can also drag
the Timeline ruler to a chapter or cue point and click Add/
Remove Chapter Point or Add/Remove Cue Point.
You can also drag the Timeline slider to the desired chapter
point position in your project. Click the Add/Remove Chapter
Point.

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Corel VideoStudio X10

Organize and find media
Organize the media clips in the Library so you can access assets for
your projects with ease and speed. You can also import a Library to
restore media files and other library information.
This section contains the following topics:
•

Using the Library

•

Sorting, viewing, and filtering clips in the Library

•

Resizing thumbnails

•

Tagging files as 3D

Using the Library
The Library is a storage depot for everything you need to create a
movie: video clips, photos, audio files, instant project templates,
transitions, titles, filters, graphics, and tracking paths.
Create a custom library for your project. You can select, add, and
delete media in the Library. If the media files are moved from their
original location, you can automatically restore the links. Remember to
export the library to create a backup on the hard drive or an external
storage device. You can then import the library at a later time.
After completing a project, you can reset the Library to restore the
default media clips. The files you added will be deleted from the
Library, but not from their original location. You can always choose to
re-import your media files into the Library.

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65

Right-click a clip in the Library to view the clip's properties as
well as copy, delete, or split clips by scene.
You can also trim a clip in the Library by using dragging the
Scrubber in the Player panel to set the Mark-in/Mark-out
points.
Library files that you use in a project are identified by a green
check mark in the upper right corner of the thumbnail.

For information about supported media formats, see “Supported file
formats” on page 14.

To select media in the Library
•

66

In the Library, do one of the following:
• Select one media file — click a thumbnail.

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• Select multiple media files — press and hold [Ctrl], and then
click the thumbnails you want.
• Select a sequence of media files — click the first thumbnail in
the sequence, press and hold [Shift], and then click the last
thumbnail in the sequence.
• Select a grouping of media files — drag your pointer across the
thumbnails that you want to select.

To add media clips to the Library
1

Click Add to create a new library folder where you want to store
your media clips.
Note: You can create custom folders to separate your personal
clips from sample clips or to keep all clips that belong to a project
in a single folder.

2

Click the Import Media Files button

3

Select the files you want to import.

4

Click Open.

to locate your files.

Click Browse to open the File Explorer where you can drag and
drop files to the Library.

To delete media clips from the Library
1

In the Library, select a clip and press [Delete].
Or, right-click the clip in the Library and click Delete.
Note: While the clips are referenced in the Library, they actually
remain in their original location, so when you delete a clip from
the Library, only the reference is deleted. You can still access the
actual file in the location where it is stored.

2

When prompted, confirm that you want to delete the thumbnail
from the Library.

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To automatically locate and restore links to media files
•

Click File > Relink.
A message appears that notifies you about the number of clips
that are successfully relinked.
Note: If the links to some clips are not restored, you can restore
them manually by browsing for the corresponding file on your
computer.

To export a library
1

Click Settings > Library Manager > Export library and specify a
folder location where you want to save your Library.

2

Click OK.
This action creates a backup of the virtual media file
information of your current library in the directory you specify.

To import a Library
1

Click on Settings > Library Manager > Import Library and find
the folder that you want to import.

2

Click OK.

To reset the Library
•

Click Settings > Library Manager > Reset Library.
This action restores the Library to the default settings and
deletes all user added files.

Sorting, viewing, and filtering clips in the Library
There are different ways to sort, view, and filter your media clips in the
Library:

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•

Sort media by properties such as name, file type, date, and
resolution.

•

View media as thumbnails or as a list that includes details about
the files.

•

Filter media by hiding or showing media by type—photos, videos,
and audio

To sort media clips
•

Click the Sort clips in the Library button
property in the menu.

, and select a Sort by

To change the media clips view
•

Click the List view button
to display your media clips in a list
that includes file properties, or click the Thumbnail view button
to display thumbnails.
If you want to sort the media clips in List view, click a property
title, such as Name, Type, or Date.
You can also click the Show/Hide title button
the file names of the media clips.

to show or hide

List view shows properties such as file name, media type,
date, duration, resolution, frames per second (FPS), and
codecs.

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To show or hide media clips
•

Click one or more of the following buttons:
• Show / Hide Videos
• Show / Hide Photos
• Show / Hide Audio Files

To change the Library panel view
•

You can use the icons in the Library panel to display Instant
Project templates, transitions, titles, graphics, filters, and tracking
paths.

Resizing thumbnails
Corel VideoStudio allows you to adjust the size of thumbnails for
easier access to the different media clips in the Library.
Thumbnail
size slider

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To adjust thumbnail size
•

Move the slider to the left or right to decrease or increase
thumbnail size.

Tagging files as 3D
In Corel VideoStudio, MVC and MPO clips are automatically detected
and tagged as 3D during import. You can also tag 2D clips to simulate
the 3D effect when you render the project as a 3D movie. Tagged 3D
media clips are marked with 3D for easy identification and to enable
the 3D media clip for 3D editing.
The Left-Right format for side-by-side 3D is a popular choice for
delivering content and is used mostly in media clips imported or
captured from 3D video cameras. The Right-Left option is used mostly
in media clips acquired from the Web.

To tag video and photo clips as 3D
1

Right-click 3D files imported into the Library or the Timeline and
choose Tag as 3D from the right-click menu. The 3D Settings
dialog box is displayed.

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2

Choose one of the following options to set the correct format for
3D content:
• 2D — the default setting if the selected clip is not recognized as
3D.
• Side-by-side — delivers 3D content by splitting the horizontal
resolution of each frame for the left and right eye. Side-by-side
3D is widely used by cable channels for delivering content for
3D ready TV sets because of lower bandwidth usage. Choose
between the Left-Right and Right-Left formats.
• Over-Under — delivers 3D content by splitting the vertical
resolution of each frame for the left and right eye. The higher
count of horizontal pixels makes this option more suitable for

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displaying panning motion. Choose between the Left-Right and
Right-Left formats.
• Multiview Video Coding (MVC) — generates a high-definition
two-view (stereoscopic) video or a multi-view 3D video.
• Multi-view image — delivers high-quality stereoscopic images
such as Multi-Picture Object (MPO) files that are shot using 3D
cameras.
3

Click OK.
The thumbnail of the media clip in the Library and Timeline now
has the 3D tag.

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Timeline
The Timeline is where you assemble the media clips for your video
project.
This section contains the following topics:
•

Switching between Timeline views

•

Showing and hiding tracks

•

Adding and swapping tracks

•

Grouping and ungrouping

•

Using Ripple Editing

Switching between Timeline views
Two types of views are available in the Timeline: Storyboard View and
Timeline View.

Storyboard View
The fastest and simplest way to organize photos and video clips in a
project is to use the Storyboard View. Each thumbnail in the
storyboard represents a photo, video clip, or a transition. Thumbnails
are shown in the order in which they appear in your project, and you
can drag thumbnails to rearrange them. The duration of each clip is
shown at the bottom of each thumbnail. In addition, you can insert
transitions between video clips, and you can trim a selected video clip
in the Preview Window.

Timeline

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Corel VideoStudio Storyboard View

Timeline View
Timeline View gives you the most comprehensive display of the
elements in your movie project. It divides a project into separate tracks
for video, overlay, title, voice, and music.

1 2

3
9

4
5

10

6

11

12
13
14
7

8
Corel VideoStudio Timeline View

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Part

Description

1 — Show All Visible
Tracks

Displays all tracks in your project.

2 — Track Manager

Lets you manage the tracks visible in the
Timeline.

3 — Selected range

Displays a color bar that represents the
trimmed or selected part of a project.

4 — Add / Remove
Chapter or Cue

Lets you set chapter or cue points in your
movie.

5 — Enable / Disable
Ripple Editing

When enabled, clips maintain their relative
positions when a clip is added to the track.
For more information, see “Using Ripple
Editing” on page 81.

6 — Track buttons

Shows / Hides individual tracks.

7 — Automatically
scroll Timeline

Enables or disables scrolling along the
Timeline when you preview a clip that
extends beyond the current view.

8 — Scroll controls

Lets you move around your project by using
the left and right buttons or dragging the
Scroll Bar.

9 — Timeline ruler

Helps you determine clip and project length
by displaying the project's timecode
increments in hours:minutes:seconds:frames.

10 — Video Track

Contains videos, photos, graphics, and
transitions. Note that in HTML 5 mode, you
can also have a Background Track.

11 — Overlay Tracks

Contains overlay clips, which can be video,
photo, graphic, or color clips. Note the
HTML 5 projects also have overlay tracks.

12 — Title Track

Contains title clips.

13 — Voice Track

Contains voice-over clips.

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Part

Description

14 — Music Track

Contains music clips from audio files.

You can use the mouse wheel to scroll through the Timeline.
Right-click on any track button and choose Select all media to
select all media clips that are in the track.
When the pointer is at the Zoom controls or Timeline ruler,
you can use the mouse wheel to zoom in and out of the
Timeline.

To switch between Storyboard View and Timeline View
•

Click the buttons at the left side of the Toolbar.

Showing and hiding tracks
You can show or hide tracks. When tracks are hidden, they do not
show during playback or when you render your video. Selectively
showing or hiding tracks lets you see the effect of each track in a
project without having to delete and reimport media clips repeatedly.

To show or hide tracks
•

Click the Track button of the track that you want to show or hide.
The track is dimmed in the Timeline when it is hidden.

Adding and swapping tracks
The Track Manager allows you to take more control of the Timeline.
You can have up to 20 Overlay tracks, two Title tracks, and eight Music
tracks.
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In an HTML5 project, you can have up to three Background tracks, 18
Overlay tracks, two Title tracks, and three Music tracks.
There is only one Video track and one Voice track.
You can also insert and delete additional overlay, title, and music
tracks, as well as swap overlay tracks directly in the Timeline.

To add tracks with the Track Manager
1

Click Track Manager on the Toolbar.

2

Specify the number of tracks you want to display from the dropdown list for each track.

Click Set as Default to save current settings as defaults for all
new projects.
You can also reduce the number of optional tracks that you
have added by adjusting the Track Manager settings

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To insert or delete tracks in the Timeline
1

In the Timeline, right-click a track button for a track type that you
want to insert or delete, and choose one of the following menu
commands:
• Insert Track Above — Inserts a track above the selected track
• Insert Track Below — Inserts a track below the selected track
• Delete Track — Removes the track from the Timeline
A track of the same type is inserted or the selected track is
removed.
The menu items listed above appear only if the action is
permitted. For example, Delete Track is not available if you
have not added optional tracks in the project. Similarly, if you
already have the maximum number of tracks for the selected
track type, the insert track menu commands do not display.

To swap Overlay tracks
1

Right-click on an Overlay track button
Tracks.

and select Swap

2

Choose the corresponding Overlay track that you want to swap.
All media in the selected Overlay tracks swap.
This feature only works if you are working on projects with
multiple Overlay Tracks.

Grouping and ungrouping
You can group and ungroup items that are in the timeline. For
example, you can select multiple clips or photos from one or more
tracks and group them so that you can move them all at the same time

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or apply an effect to the group. You can ungroup the elements at any
time.
How can you tell if an item is part of a group?
When you click an item that is grouped in the Timeline, all items in the
group appear highlighted (orange outline).

When you click a grouped item in the Timeline, all
items in the group appear highlighted (orange
outline).

To group items in the Timeline
1

In the Edit workspace, ensure that the items you want to group
have been added to the Timeline.

2

Hold Shift, and in the Timeline, click all the items that you want to
group.

3

Right-click a selected item and choose Group from the contextmenu.

To ungroup items in the Timeline
1

In the Timeline, right-click one of the grouped items and choose
Ungroup from the context-menu.

Using Ripple Editing
Use Ripple Editing to maintain the original synchronization of tracks
when inserting or deleting clips.
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For example, if you add a 10-second clip at the beginning of the video,
all the other clips moves to the right by 10 seconds. This makes editing
more efficient by keeping all tracks synchronized.

Original Timeline

Timeline after a clip is inserted in the Video Track with
Ripple Editing disabled. Only the clips on the Video
Track are moved when a new clip is inserted.

Timeline after a clip is inserted in the Video Track with
Ripple Editing enabled on some tracks. Clips on the

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tracks with Ripple Editing enabled move when a new
clip is inserted to maintain original synchronization.

To insert clips in Ripple Editing mode
1

Click the Enable/Disable Ripple Editing button
the panel.

2

Click
beside each track where you want to apply Ripple
Editing.

3

Drag a clip to insert from the Library to the desired position on
the Timeline. As soon as the new clip is in place, all clips where
Ripple Editing is applied will shift accordingly while maintaining
their track positions relative to one another.
Note: Ripple Editing also works when you remove clips.

Timeline

to activate

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Edit media
Videos clips, photos and audio clips are the foundation of your project
and manipulating them is the most important skill you can master.
This section contains the following topics:
•

Using the Options panel in the Edit workspace

•

Converting multiple files

•

Adding video clips

•

Adding photos

•

Time remapping

•

Modifying video playback speed

•

Using Freeze Frame

•

Replacing media clips

•

Trimming a clip

•

Using Split by Scene

•

Trimming video into multiple clips

•

Saving trimmed clips

•

Taking a snapshot from a video clip

•

Enhancing clips

•

Adjusting white balance

•

Applying pan and zoom effect

•

Working with the Mask Creator

•

Track transparency

•

360 video

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Using the Options panel in the Edit workspace
The Options panel in the Edit workspace allows you to modify the
media, transitions, titles, graphics, animation, and filters that you add
to the Timeline. The number of tabs and controls available depends
on the type of media that you select. For example, if you select a video
clip, and click Options in the Library panel, two tabs display: Video and
Attribute.

Video: Video tab
• Video Duration — Displays the duration of the selected clip in
hours:minutes:seconds:frames. You can trim the selected clip by
changing the clip duration.
•

Clip volume — Allows you to adjust the volume of the audio
segment of your video.

•

Mute — Silences the audio segment of your video without
deleting it.

•

Fade-in/out — Gradually increases/decreases the volume of the
clip for a smooth transition. Select Settings > Preferences > Edit
to set the fade-in/out duration.

•

Rotate — Rotates the video clip.

•

Color Correction — Allows you to adjust the hue, saturation,
brightness, contrast, and gamma of the video clip. You can also
adjust the White balance of the video or photo clip or make auto
tone adjustments.

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•

Speed/Time-lapse — Allows you to adjust the playback speed of
your clip and apply Time-lapse and Strobe effects.

•

Variable Speed — Allows you to adjust the playback speed of a
clip at different intervals.

•

Reverse video — Plays the video backward.

•

Split Audio — Allows you to separate the audio from a video file
and place it on the Voice Track.

•

Split by Scene — Splits a captured DV AVI file based on the
shooting date and time, or the changes in video content (i.e.,
motion change, camera shifting, brightness change, etc.).

• Multi-Trim Video — Allows you to choose desired segments from
a video file and extract them.
• Resampling Option — Allows you to set the aspect ratio for the
video.
Photo: Photo tab
• Duration — Sets the duration of the selected image clip.
•

Rotate — Rotates the image clip.

•

Color Correction — Allows you to adjust the hue, saturation,
brightness, contrast, and gamma of the image. You can also
adjust the White balance of the video or image clip or make auto
tone adjustments.

•

Resampling Option — Lets you modify a photo’s aspect ratio
when a transition or effect is applied.

•

Pan & Zoom — Applies the Pan & Zoom effect to the current
image.

•

Presets — Provides various Pan & Zoom presets. Choose a preset
from the drop-list.

• Customize — Allows you to define how to pan and zoom the
current image.

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Color: Color tab
• Duration — Sets the duration of the selected color clip.
• Color Picker — Click the color box to adjust the color.
Attribute tab
• Mask & Chroma Key — Allows you to apply overlay options such
as mask, chroma key, and transparency.
•

Alignment Options — Allows you to adjust object position in
preview window. Set the option through the Alignment Options
pop-up menu.

•

Replace last filter — Allows the last filter applied to a clip to be
replaced when you drag a new filter onto the clip. Clear this
option if you want to add multiple filters to your clips.

•

Applied filters — Lists the video filters that were applied to a clip.
or
to arrange the order of the filters; click
to
Click
remove a filter.

•

Presets — Provides various filter presets. Choose a preset from
the drop-list.

•

Customize Filter — Allows you to define the behavior of the filter
throughout the clip.

•

Direction/Style — Allows you to set the direction and style of
entry/exit of the clip. This can be set to static, top/bottom, left/
right, top-left/top-right, bottom-left/bottom-right.
As for the style, you can set direction of entry/exit of clips through:
Rotate before/after pause duration and Fade in/out motion
effect.

•

Distort clip — Allows you to modify the size and proportions of
the clip.

• Show grid lines — Select to display the grid lines. Click

to

open a dialog box where you can specify settings for the grid
lines.
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• Advanced Motion — Opens the Customize Motion dialog box
which allows you to customize the motion of overlays and titles.
For more information, see “Customizing motion” on page 179.

Converting multiple files
Batch Convert allows you to convert a large number of files to another
format in sequence. You can also create a profile for performing batch
conversions. This allows you to save the batch conversion settings and
apply them to future batch conversions.

To run a Batch Convert
1

Click File > Batch Convert.

2

Click Add and then choose the files you want to convert.

3

Select an output folder in Save in folder.

4

In Save as type, choose your desired output type.
If you want to set more advanced saving options, click the
Options button.

5

Click Convert.

The result is shown in the Task Report dialog box. Click OK to finish.

To create a Batch Convert profile
1

Click File > Batch Convert.

2

In the Batch Convert dialog box, choose the settings that you
want to save as a profile.

3

Click the Profile button and choose Add Profile.

4

In the Add Template dialog box, type a name for the profile.
You can apply a Batch Convert profile by clicking the Profile
button and choosing the profile that you want to apply.

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You delete a Batch Convert profile by clicking the Profile
button, choosing Delete Profile, and choosing the profile that
you want to delete.

Adding video clips
There are several ways of inserting video clips to the Timeline:
•

Select a clip in the Library and drag it to the Video Track or
Overlay Track. Multiple clips can be selected by pressing [Shift].

•

Right-click a clip in the Library and select Insert To: Video Track or
Insert To: Overlay Track.

•

Select one or more video files in Windows Explorer and drag
them to the Video Track or Overlay Track.

• To insert a clip from a file folder directly to the Video Track or
Overlay Track, right-click the Timeline, select Insert Video and
locate the video to use.
3D media clips are supported in Corel VideoStudio. You can
tag 3D media clips so that they can be easily identified and
edited with 3D editing features. For more information, see
“Tagging files as 3D” on page 71.

Aside from video files, you can also add video from DVD
formatted discs.

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Adding photos
Photo clips are added to the Video Track the same way as video clips.
Before you start adding photos to your project, determine the photo
size that you want for all your photos. By default, Corel VideoStudio
adjusts the size to keep the photo’s aspect ratio.
Corel PaintShop Pro PSPIMAGE files (*.pspimage) are supported in
Corel VideoStudio. PSPIMAGE files that are imported into the Library
have a multiple layer indicator, so you can distinguish them from other
types of media clips.

To make all inserted photos the same size as the frame size
of your project
1

Click Settings > Preferences > Edit.

2

Change the Image resampling option default to Fit to project
size.

To import PSPIMAGE files into the Timeline
1

Right-click a clip in the Library.

2

Click Insert To and select the track where you want to add your
media clip.

3

Choose one of the following options:
• Layers - lets you include the layers of a file into separate tracks
• Flatten - lets you insert a flattened image into a single track

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You can also drag the file directly into the Timeline and the
program will automatically add the layers to separate tracks. To
insert a flattened image, hold down [Shift] and drag the file.

Time remapping
Play with speed with easy-to-use controls that let you add slow motion
or high speed effects, freeze the action, or reverse and replay scenes
in your video. All the tools you need for speed effects have been
consolidated in one place.
The Time Remapping dialog box includes familiar playback and trim
controls, as well as a thumbnail area that displays each change made
with the speed controls.

The Time Remapping dialog box

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To change the playback speed, freeze, or reverse video
footage
1

In the Timeline view (Edit workspace), right-click the clip you want
to work with, and choose Time Remapping from the context
menu.

2

In the Time Remapping window, scrub through the video to
figure out where you want to change the speed of playback,
reverse the action, or add one or more freeze frames.

3

Click the Play button

or drag the scrubber to the position you

want, and click the Mark In button

and Mark Out button

to choose a segment of the clip that you want to work with. A
white line indicates a marked segment of the clip.

Note: The playback controls let you navigate the original version
of the clip.
4

Do any of the following:
, and drag the slider to set the speed
• Click the Speed button
for the selected segment. Dragging to the right increases the
speed; dragging to the left slows the speed.
If you want to gradually apply the speed change, you can mark
the Ease in and Ease out check boxes.
Note: The audio is removed when you change the speed of a
clip.

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• Click the Reverse button
time(s).
5

, and type a repetition value in the

To freeze a frame, click any point along the timeline that doesn’t
have a white line (cannot freeze a frame in a section that has been
reversed or has had the speed changed), click the Freeze Frame
button
, and type the number of seconds for the frame
duration.

6

To verify the changes you’ve applied, review the thumbnails that
appear below the playback controls. An icon in the upper left
corner of the thumbnails indicates which type of speed control
has been applied (note that speed change uses different icons—a
turtle to indicate slow motion; a rabbit to indicate faster speed).

Click the Play the time remapping result button
result.

to play the

If you want to remove a segment or freeze a frame, click the
corresponding thumbnail, and click the Remove selected clips
button
7

Click OK to return to the Edit workspace.

Modifying video playback speed
You can modify the playback speed of your videos. Set your video in
slow motion to emphasize a movement, or set it to play at lightning
speed and give your movie a comical air. You can also use this feature
to achieve time-lapse and strobe effects on your videos and photos.

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You can also make quick and basic speed adjustments in the Time
Remapping dialog box. For more information, see

To adjust the speed and time-lapse attributes of your video
clip
1

In the Edit workspace, click Options, and click Speed/Time-lapse
in the Options panel.

2

In New clip duration, specify a set duration for your video clip.
Note: If you want to maintain the original duration of your clip,
do not change the original value.

3

In Frame Frequency, specify the number of frames to be removed
at regular intervals during video playback.
Note: A higher value entered in Frame Frequency will produce a
more noticeable time-lapse effect on your video. Otherwise,
maintain the value at 0 to retain all frames in your video clip.

4

Drag the Speed slider according to your preferences (i.e., slow,
normal or fast), or enter a value.
Note: The higher the value you set, the faster the playback of
your clip. (Values range from 10-1000%).

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5

Click Preview to view the results of your settings.

6

Click OK.

To apply Time-lapse/Strobe effects on your photos
1

Click File > Insert Media File to Timeline > Insert Photo for
Time-lapse/Strobe.

2

Browse for the photos you want to include in your project and
click Open.
Note: It is recommended to choose a series of photos taken in
succession with your DSLR.

3

Specify the number of frames to be retained and removed in
Keep and Drop.

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Note: For example, you enter a value of 1 in Keep and 3 in Drop.
This means that it will follow the interval to retain one frame and
remove three frames for the set of photos selected.
4

In Frame duration, specify the exposure time for each frame.

5

Use the playback controls to preview the effect of the frame
settings on your photos.

6

Click OK.
If the value of Frame Frequency is more than 1 and clip
duration is the same, Strobe effect will be produced. If the value
of Frame Frequency is more than 1 and clip duration is
shortened, Time-lapse effect will be produced.
Hold [Shift] then drag the end of the clip on the Timeline to
change the playback speed.
The black arrow means you are trimming or extending the clip,
while the white arrow means that you are changing the
playback speed.

To adjust the variable speed attributes of your video clip
1

In the Edit workspace, click Options, and click Variable Speed in
the Options panel.

2

Drag the Scrubber to the points where you want to add key
frames.

3

Click Add key frame
to set the frame as a key frame in the clip.
You can change the playback speed at each key frame.

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4

To increase or decrease the speed, click the
value in Speed.

buttons or enter a

You can also drag the slider from Slow to Normal or Fast.
5

Click the Play button

6

Click OK when finished.

to preview the effect.

You can add variety to your project by modifying the playback
speed of a clip at different intervals.
Setting the variable speed removes the audio of the video clip.

To reverse video playback
•

98

Click Reverse video in the Options Panel.

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Using Freeze Frame
You can use Freeze Frame to showcase a specific frame in your video
by extending the length of time that frame displays. For example, you
can use Freeze Frame to showcase the video frame where a goal is
scored in a sporting event or use it to showcase a smile or reaction that
you’ve captured.
When you apply Freeze Frame to a video clip, the clip is automatically
split at the freeze point and the frame you choose is inserted as an
image file (BMP) and displayed onscreen for the duration that you set.

To apply Freeze Frame
1

In the Timeline (Edit workspace), select the video clip that has a
frame you want to freeze.

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2

Scrub to the frame you want to use. The selected frame displays in
the Preview window.
Note: The Previous and Next buttons in the Navigation panel let
you navigate a clip frame-by-frame to find the frame you want.

3

Click Edit menu > Freeze Frame.

4

In the Freeze Frame dialog box, set the Duration.
Note: If you want to suspend audio on other tracks during the
freeze, enable the Split Audio check box. This splits and suspends
all audio-related tracks (voice, music, video overlays) for the
duration of the freeze.

5

Click OK.

Replacing media clips
Media clips in the Timeline can be replaced in their current position.
When you replace a clip, the attributes of the original clip are applied
to the new clip.

To replace a clip
1

In the Timeline, right-click the media clips you want to replace.

2

Choose Replace clip from the right-click menu.
The Replace/relink clip dialog box appears.

3

Browse for the replacement media clips and click Open.
The clip in the Timeline is automatically replaced.
The duration of the replacement clip must be equal to or longer
than the duration of the original clip.
Hold [Shift] and click multiple clips to select two or more clips
in the Timeline and repeat the process for replacing multiple

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clips. The number of replacement clips must match the number
of clips that you selected in the Timeline.
You can also drag a video clip from the Library to the Timeline
and hold the [Ctrl] key to automatically snap on a clip to be
replaced.

Trimming a clip
The best part of editing your movie on your computer is the ease with
which you can split and trim your clips with frame accuracy.

To split a clip into two
1

In Storyboard View or Timeline View, select the clip you want to
split.

2

Drag the Scrubber to the point where you want to split the clip.

Note: Click
3

or

to set the cutting point more precisely.

Click
to split the clip into two clips. To remove one of these
clips, select the unwanted clip and press [Delete].

To trim a clip with the Trim markers using Single Clip
Trimmer
1

Double-click a video clip in the Library or right-click on a video
clip and choose Single Clip Trim to launch the Single Clip Trim
dialog box.

2

Click and drag the Trim markers to set the Mark-in/Mark-out
points on the clip.

3

For more precise trimming, click on a Trim marker, hold it, and use
the left or right arrow keys on your keyboard to trim one frame at

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a time. The Mark-in/Mark-out points can also be set by pressing
[F3] and [F4], respectively.

Trim markers

4

Mark-in/
Mark-out

To preview the trimmed clip only, press [Shift + Space] or hold
[Shift] and click the Play button.
Note: You can also use zoom controls to display each frame of
your video on the Timeline and trim one frame at a time. The
Scroll Bar makes navigating through your project quicker and
easier. A wheel mouse can also be used to scroll, and to zoom by
pressing [Ctrl].

To trim a clip directly on the Timeline
1

Click a clip on the Timeline to select it.

2

Drag the Trim markers on either side of the clip to change its
length. The Preview Window reflects the position of the Trim
marker in the clip.
Note: Instant timecode tip is a feature of Corel VideoStudio that
allows you to add clips with a specific timecode. It appears while
trimming and inserting overlapping clips on the Timeline,
enabling you to make adjustments based on the timecode shown.
For example, the instant timecode tip appears with the format
00:00:17.05 (03:00 - 00). 00:00:17.05 indicates the current
timecode where the selected clip is located. The (03:00 - 00) startend range represents the duration of one overlapping clip with
the previous clip and another overlapping with the next clip.

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Instant timecode tip

To trim a clip using the Duration box
1

Click a clip on the Timeline to select it.

2

Click the timecode in the Duration box in the Options Panel and
enter the desired clip length.
Duration

Trim markers

Note: Changes made in the video Duration box only affect the
Mark-out point. The Mark-in point remains unchanged.

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Using Split by Scene
Use the Split by Scene feature in the Edit workspace to detect different
scenes in a video file and automatically break it down into several clip
files.
The way Corel VideoStudio detects scenes depends on the type of
video file. In a captured DV AVI file, scenes can be detected in two
ways:
•

DV Recording Time Scan detects scenes according to their
shooting date and time.

• Frame Content detects content changes, such as motion change,
camera shifting, brightness change, etc., and splits them into
separate files.
In an MPEG-1 or MPEG-2 file, scenes can only be detected based on
content changes (i.e., by Frame Content).

To use Split by Scene on a DV AVI or MPEG file
1

In the Edit workspace, select a captured DV AVI file or an MPEG
file on the Timeline.

2

Click Options and click the Split by Scene button
in the
Options panel. This will open the Scenes dialog box.

3

Choose your preferred scan method (DV Recording Time Scan or
Frame Content).

4

Click Options. In the Scene Scanning Sensitivity dialog box, drag
the slider to set the Sensitivity level. A higher value means more
precision in the scene detection.

5

Click OK.

6

Click Scan. Corel VideoStudio then scans through the video file
and lists all the detected scenes.
You may merge some of the detected scenes into a single clip.

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Simply select all the scenes that you want to join together then
click Join. The plus sign (+) and a number indicates how many
scenes are merged into that particular clip. Click Split to undo any
Join actions that you have done.
7

Click OK to split the video.

Trimming video into multiple clips
The Multi-trim Video feature is another method for breaking down a
clip into multiple segments. While Split by Scene is automatically done
by the program, Multi-trim Video gives you complete control over the
clips you wish to extract, making it even easier to include only the
scenes you want.

1

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2

3 4

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Part

Description

1 — Timeline zoom

Drag up and down to sub-divide a video clip
into frames per second.

2 — AccuCut
Timeline

Scan a video clip frame by frame for accurate
mark-in and mark-out positions.

3 — Playback
Speed Control

Preview the clip at different playback speeds.

4 — Jog Wheel

Use to scroll to different parts of the clip.

To trim a video file into multiple clips
1

In the Edit workspace, select the clip that you want to trim.

2

Double click the clip to open the Options panel.

3

Click Multi-trim Video in the Options panel.

4

View the whole clip first by clicking Play to determine how you
want to mark segments in the Multi-trim Video dialog box.

5

Choose the number of frames to display by dragging the Timeline
zoom. You can choose to display the smallest subdivision of one
frame per second.

6

Drag the Scrubber until you get to the part of the video that you
want to use as the beginning frame of the first segment. Click Set
Mark-in button

7

.

Drag the Scrubber again, this time, to the point where you want
the segment to end. Click Set Mark-out button

8

106

.

Do steps 4 and 5 repeatedly until you have marked all the
segments you want keep or remove.
Note: To mark segments in and out, you can press [F3] and [F4]
while playing the video. You can also click the Invert Selection
button
or press [Alt+I] to toggle between marking segments

Corel VideoStudio X10

that you want to retain or marking segments that you want taken
out from the clip.
Quick search interval allows you to set a fixed interval between
frames and browse through the movie using the set value.
9

Click OK when finished. The video segments that you kept are
then inserted onto the Timeline.

Navigation controls in the Multi-trim Video dialog box
Reverses or advances through the video in fixed
increments. By default, these buttons move up or
down through the video in increments of 15 seconds.
Plays a preview of the final trimmed video.
Plays the video file. Hold [Shift] then click to play
only the selected segments.
Moves to the start or end frame of a trimmed
segment.
Moves to the previous/next frame in the video.
Repeats playback of video

Saving trimmed clips
Frequently, when you make changes (i.e., after auto-splitting clips
using Split by Scene, extracting clips using Multi-trim Video, or
manually trimming clips), you may wish to make a permanent change
to the clip and save the edited file. Corel VideoStudio gives you a
margin of safety since it saves the trimmed video to a new file and
does not alter the original file.

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To save a trimmed clip
1

In the Storyboard View, Timeline View, or the Library, select a
trimmed clip.

2

Click File > Save Trimmed Video.

Taking a snapshot from a video clip
You can take a photo snapshot in the Edit workspace by selecting a
specific frame on the Timeline and saving it as an image file.

To capture photos in the Edit workspace
1

Click Settings > Preferences > Capture.
Choose Bitmap or JPEG as the Snapshot format.
Note: If you select JPEG, set the Snapshot quality.

2

Click OK.

3

In the Timeline, select a video clip in your project.

4

Drag the Scrubber to the frame you want to capture.

5

Click Edit > Take a Snapshot. The photo snapshot is automatically
added to the Library and saved to your working folder.

Enhancing clips
Corel VideoStudio lets you improve the appearance of a video or
image clip by adjusting its current properties.

To adjust color and brightness
1

Select the video or image clip to enhance on the Timeline.

2

Drag the sliders to adjust the Hue, Saturation, Brightness,
Contrast or Gamma of the clip.

3

Watch the Preview Window to see how the new settings affect
the image.

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Note: Double-click the appropriate slider to reset the original
color setting of the clip.

To adjust the tone quality of your video or image clips
1

In the Edit workspace, click Options and click Color Correction in
the Options panel.

2

Click Auto Tone Adjustment.
Note: You can indicate if you want the clip as Brightest, Brighter,
Normal, Darker or Darkest by clicking the Auto Tone Adjustment
drop-list.

To resize or distort a clip
1

Select a clip in the Video Track then click the Attribute tab in the
Options panel.

2

Check the Distort clip option box. The yellow handles will appear.
Do any of the following steps:
• Drag yellow handles at the corners to resize the clip
proportionally (A).
• Drag yellow handles at the sides to resize without maintaining
proportions (B).
• Drag the green handles at the corners to skew the clip (C).

A

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B

C

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Adjusting white balance
White balance restores the natural color temperature of an image by
removing unwanted color casts due to conflicting light sources and
incorrect camera settings.
For example, an object illuminated with incandescent lights may turn
out too reddish or yellowish in an image or video clip. To successfully
achieve a natural look, you need to identify a reference point in your
image which represents the color white. Corel VideoStudio gives you
different options in selecting the white point:
•

Auto — Automatically chooses a white point that is well-matched
with the overall color of your image.

•

Pick Color — Allows you to manually select the white point in the
image. Use the Eyedropper Tool to pick a reference area that
should be white or neutral gray.

•

White balance presets — Automatically selects the white point by
matching specific light conditions or scenarios.

• Temperature — Allows you to specify color temperature of light
sources in Kelvin (K). Lower values indicate Tungsten, Fluorescent
and Daylight scenarios while Cloudy, Shade and Overcast fall
under high color temperature.

To adjust White balance
1

Select a video or photo on the Timeline or the Library.

2

In the Edit workspace, click Options to open the Options panel.

3

Click the Video or Photo tab and click Color Correction.

4

Check the White balance option box.

5

Determine how you want to identify the white point. Choose
among the different options (Auto, Pick color, White balance
presets or Temperature).

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6

If you have selected Pick color, choose Show preview to display a
preview area in the Options Panel.

7

When you drag your cursor to the Preview area, it will change to
an eyedropper icon.

8

Click to identify a reference point in your image which represents
the color white.

9

Watch the Preview Window to see how the new settings affect
the image.
Note: Click the White balance drop-down arrow to display more
color adjustments you can use. Select either Vivid Color or
Normal Color for the color intensity. As for the level of sensitivity
of White balance, you can choose any of the following options:
Weaker, Normal and Stronger.

Applying pan and zoom effect
Pan & Zoom is applied to photos, and it emulates the pan and zoom
movements of a video camera. This is known as the “Ken Burns effect”.

To apply pan and zoom effect to photos
•

Right-click the photo in the Timeline and select Auto Pan &
Zoom.

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Note: You can also apply pan and zoom to a photo by clicking
Pan & Zoom in the Photo tab of the Options panel.

You can customize a pan and zoom effect. The procedure below shows
an example of how to start zoomed in on a subject, then pan and
zoom out to show the whole image.

To customize pan and zoom effect
1

In the Photo tab, select Customize under Pan & Zoom.

2

In the Pan and Zoom dialog box, the crosshairs
in the Original
Window represent the key frames in the image clip where settings
can be customized to produce the pan and zoom effect.

3

Drag the Start key frame, represented by crosshairs in the Image
Window, to the area where you want to focus.

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Image

Preview

4

Zoom in on the area by minimizing the marquee box or by
increasing the Zoom ratio.

5

Drag crosshairs of the End key frame to your desired final point.

Preview

Original

Original

Preview

6

Click the Play button

to preview the effect.

7

Click OK to apply the effect to the image.

Additional options in the Pan and Zoom dialog box allow you to
further customize this effect. Click the Anchor boxes to move the
marquee box to fixed positions in the Original Window.

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To zoom in or out of a fixed area without panning the image,
select No panning.
To include a fade-in/out effect, increase the Transparency. The
image will fade to the Background color. Click the color box to
choose a background color, or use the eye dropper tool
to
select a color on the Image Window.

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Working with the Mask Creator
You can create and edit masks in VideoStudio Ultimate that let you
apply an effect to selected areas. The Mask Creator helps you apply a
mask by using a brush or shape tools. You can also invert a mask to
swap the selected and unselected areas.

In the Mask Creator, a highlight and a blue bounding
box indicate the mask area.

You can choose from two mask types: Video and Still. A Video mask is
designed to move and change according to the movement in the
video as it plays. A Still mask remains static (does not change) as the
video plays and it can be applied to an image.
Video masks use Detect movement options to help match the mask
to the movement of the selected object or background. Note that the
Edge tolerance settings affect the edge detection of the mask as it
plays. You can choose to detect the movement from frame-to-frame,
from the current position to end of video, and from the current
position to a specified timecode.
Editing options, such as copy, paste, and move, let you customize and
fine-tune a video mask.
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You can save your mask so that you can use it with other projects.
When you exit the Mask Creator, the mask appears as a mask clip on
a track below the corresponding source clip.

Masks appear in a track below their corresponding clip
and can be identified by a mask icon and an elliptical
vignette thumbnail.

Saved masks can be imported to the list of overlay options. For more
information about using mask frames and video masks with overlays,
see “Adding a mask frame” on page 164 and “Using video masks with
overlay clips” on page 165.
Mask Creator tools and options
You can use the following Masking tools:
•

— Lets you draw a freehand mask. Can be
Mask Brush
adjusted with the Brush size slider.

•

Smart Mask Brush
— Lets you draw a freehand mask that
uses edge-detection to make it easier to select distinct objects.
Can be adjusted with the Brush size and Edge tolerance sliders.

•

— Lets you apply a rectangular mask. For
Rectangle tool
video masks, edge-detection adjusts the edges for subsequent
frames.

•

— Lets you apply an elliptical mask. For video
Ellipse tool
masks, edge-detection adjusts the edges for subsequent frames.

•

Eraser
— Lets you erase the mask. Can be adjusted with the
Brush size slider.

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•

Smart Eraser
— Lets you erase the mask using edgedetection to make it easier to select distinct objects. Can be
adjusted with the Brush size and Edge tolerance sliders.In
addition to the Brush size slider, you can use the Edge tolerance
slider.

•

Clear Mask — Removes the mask completely.

•

Brush size slider — Changes the diameter of the Mask Brush,
Smart Mask Brush, Eraser, and Smart Eraser.

•

Edge tolerance slider — Determines the sensitivity for mask edge
detection based on how closely the pixels that you select with the
masking tools match the adjacent pixels. At low settings, only
similar pixels are included in the mask; at high settings, the mask
expands to include a wider range of pixels.

You can manage and edit masks with the following Editing tools:
•

— Hides or shows the mask highlight and
Show/Hide Mask
bounding box in the playback area.

•

Copy

— Lets you copy a mask from a specific frame

•

Paste
frame

— Lets you paste a mask that you copied from another

•

Move Mask
the frame

•

Undo

— Removes the last edit

•

Redo

— Reapplies the last edit if Undo was used

— Lets you move the mask to a new position in

Video masks can use the following Detect movement options:
•

Next Frame
— Detects movement and adjusts mask from the
current scrubber position to the next frame

•

— Detects movement and helps to adjust a mask
End of Clip
for all frames from the current scrubber position until the end of
the clip. Note: This can take a few minutes, depending on the
length and quality of the clip.

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•

Specified Timecode
— Detects movement and helps to
adjust the mask for all frames from the current scrubber position
until the specified timecode. Note: This can take a few minutes,
depending on the length and quality of the clip.

Note: Creating precise video masks requires fine-tuning.

To create a still mask with the Mask Creator
1

In the Timeline view (Edit workspace), right-click the clip you want
to work with, and choose Mask Creator from the context menu.

2

In the Mask Creator window, click the Still option.

3

In the tools area, choose the Mask Brush, Smart Mask Brush,
Rectangle tool or Ellipse tool.

4

In the playback window, drag across the area that you want to
select. A highlight appears over the selected area.

5

Review the results in the playback window. You can fine-tune the
mask by using the tools to modify the selected area.
To reset the mask, click the Clear Mask button.

6

Click OK to exit Mask Creator.
The mask appears on its own track in the Timeline, below the clip
to which it is applied. You can adjust the length of the mask as you
would other clips and you can apply effects to the mask by
dragging an effect onto the mask in the Timeline.

To create a video mask with the Mask Creator
1

In the Timeline view (Edit workspace), right-click the clip you want
to work with, and choose Mask Creator from the context menu.

2

In the Mask Creator window, click the Video option.
If you are creating a video mask for a specific segment of the
video clip, scrub through the video to figure out when you want

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the masking to start and stop. Make note of the timecode for the
stop time.
3

In the tools area, choose the Mask Brush, Smart Mask Brush,
Rectangle tool or Ellipse tool.

4

In the playback window, drag across the area that you want to
select. A highlight appears over the selected area.

5

In the Detect movement area, choose Next Frame
Clip

, End of

, or type a timecode in the timecode box and then

. Note that when you detect
click Specified Timecode
movement to the end of a clip or to a specified timecode, it
can take a few minutes, depending on the length of the
clip and the quality.
6

Review the results in the playback window. You can fine-tune by
scrubbing through the video and using the Eraser tool and Brush
tool to modify the selected area. In some cases, you might find
the Editing tools helpful when working from frame-to-frame.

To edit a mask
1

In the Timeline (Edit workspace), right-click a mask clip and
choose Edit Mask from the context menu.
The Mask Creator dialog box opens. Make any adjustments you
want and click OK to return to the Timeline.

To save a mask
1

After you create a mask, in the Save options area of the Mask
Creator dialog box, click Mask (default) or Invert mask.
Note: If you invert the mask, the preview area does not show the
inverted mask—it displays when you return to the Timeline.

2

Set a destination in the Save to box.

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3

Click the Save As button at the bottom of the dialog box, and
choose a name for the mask.
If you want to link the mask to the original clip, mark the Link
mask to source clip check box. Note that you can link only one
mask per file.

To import a video or still mask as an overlay option
1

In the Timeline, select an overlay clip.

2

In the Options panel, click Mask & Chroma Key in the Attribute
tab.

3

Click the Apply Overlay Options check box, then choose Mask
Frame (for a still mask) or Video Mask from the Type drop-list.

4

Click the Add mask item(s) button
to the right of the mask
preview area, and browse to a saved mask file (.uisx format for a
video mask, .png for a still mask).
The mask is added to the preview area.
You can remove files from the video masks list by clicking the
thumbnail for the mask, and clicking the Remove mask item
button
.
You can create a folder for masks in the default user content
folder: ...Documents/Corel VideoStudio Pro/X10.0/.

Track transparency
You can use the Track Transparency mode to precisely control the
transparency of a track. Key frames let you vary track transparency to
achieve the effect you want. For example, you can adjust the
transparency of a track to create a superimposed effect (where the
underlying track shows through) or to create a custom fade in and fade
out effect.

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To adjust track transparency
1

In the Edit workspace, choose a track in the Timeline that you
want to adjust.

2

Right-click the track button, and click Track Transparency from the
context menu.

Track Transparency mode opens.

3

Do any of the following

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• To adjust the transparency for the entire track, drag the yellow
line to a new vertical position. The top has a value of 100%
opacity and ranges to 0% opacity (fully transparent) at the
bottom.
• To vary the transparency throughout the track, click the yellow
line to set a key frame. You can add as many key frames as you
like. Drag the square key frame node to the transparency level
you want.
• To delete a key frame, right-click a key frame node and choose
Remove key frame.
• To delete all key frames, right-click a key frame node and choose
Remove all key frames
4

To exit Track Transparency mode, click the Close button
the upper-right corner of the Timeline.

in

360 video
VideoStudio lets you import 360 video and convert it to standard
video.

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Note: There are different types of 360 video. VideoStudio works with
monoscopic equirectangular 360 video footage.
Why convert 360 video to standard video?
Here are a few reasons people choose to convert 360 video:
•

There are occasions when you want to control what users look at
in 360 video footage. When you convert to standard video in
VideoStudio, you can use your 360 video source in much the
same way that you can use multicamera sources—you can choose
the view for your audience with key frame precision.

•

You can play standard video using a wider range of applications
and devices—no special player is required (the video is not
interactive).

•

Standard video is a much smaller file size than 360 video.

The 360 to Standard dialog box. The 360 video source
displays on the left and a standard video preview
displays on the right

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Controls and settings in the 360 to Standard dialog box
• The key frame controls
let you
modify the key frames on the timeline, according to the position
of the scrubber. You can Add key frame, Remove key frame, Go
to previous key frame, Reverse key frames, Move key frame to
the left, Move key frame to the right, and Go to next key frame).
•

The playback bar
let you navigate your clip
(Home, Previous Frame, Play, Next Frame, End)

•

Timecode
lets you jump directly to a part of
your selected clip by specifying the exact timecode.

•

Scrubber
let you scrub through the clip. Clicking a key frame
will move the scrubber to the current position in the timeline.

•

The timeline
in the 360 to Standard dialog box is a
simple bar with time indicators. It contains any key frames you set
and can be navigated with the scrubber. You can use the Zoom in
and Zoom out buttons to the right of the timeline to expand or
condense the units of time.

•

Pan — Lets you adjust the view horizontally (x-axis)

•

Tilt — Lets you adjust the view vertically (y-axis)

•

Field of View — Lets you adjust the how close or how far away
the camera appears to be from the scene in the selected view—
the effect is similar to zooming. Lower values zoom in for a
narrower view; higher values zoom out for a wider view.

To convert 360 video to standard video
1

In the Timeline, right-click a 360 video clip, and choose 360 Video
> 360 to Standard.
The 360 Video window opens with two preview panes—the 360
video source is on the left and a standard video preview is on the
right.

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2

In the 360 video pane, drag the View Tracker icon
until its
position corresponds to the view that you want to show in the
standard video pane.

3

Click Play and as the 360 video plays, drag the View Tracker if you
want to change the view seen in the standard video pane.
Each time you change the view, key frames are added.

Key frames appear as blue diamonds along the
timeline. The selected key frame is red. Key frame
buttons (standard key frame controls) appear above
the timeline.

4

When you are finished, you can replay the video and edit the view
by doing any of the following:
• Delete a key frame by clicking it on the timeline and pressing
Delete.
• Drag a key frame on the timeline to change when the view
appears.
• Click a key frame and change the view by adjusting the Pan, Tilt,
and Field of View values in the Angle area.

5

Click OK to accept the changes and return to the Timeline.
If you want to clear all key frames, click the Reset button.

6

When you want to output your project, ensure that you choose
the standard video settings for your playback devices.

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Titles and subtitles
Corel VideoStudio lets you create professional-looking titles, complete
with special effects, in minutes. For example, you can add opening and
closing credits, captions, or subtitles.
This section contains the following topics:
•

Using the Title Safe area

•

Adding titles using the Library

•

Adding titles with the Subtitle Editor

•

Formatting text

•

Applying text effects and animation

•

Converting titles to image and animation files

Using the Title Safe area
The title safe area is the rectangular white outline on the Preview
Window. Keeping the text within the bounds of the title safe area will
make sure the title does not get cut off at the edges.

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127

To show or hide the title safe area
1

Click Settings > Preferences.

2

Under the General tab, click Display title safe area on Preview
Window.

Adding titles using the Library
You can add titles when the Title category is active in the Library. You
can add one or more simple titles or use presets to add animated titles,
such as rolling credits at the end of your movie. You can also save
custom presets.

To add multiple titles directly on the Preview Window
1

Click Title

in the Library panel.

2

Double-click the Preview Window.

3

In the Edit tab of the Options area, select Multiple titles.

4

Use the controls in the Navigation area of the Player panel to scan
your movie and select the frame where you want to add a title.

5

Double-click the Preview Window and type your text.
Click outside the text box when you are done typing.

6

Repeat steps 4 and 5 to add more titles.

You can add multiple titles and modify the attributes of each title.

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Title clips can be placed on Title, Video, and Overlay tracks.

To add a preset title to your project
1

Click Title

in the Library panel.

2

Drag and drop the preset text onto the Timeline.
Note: You can modify a preset title by double-clicking it on the
Preview Window and entering new text. Open the Options Panel
to edit the title attributes.

To save your title as a My Favorite preset
•

Right-click a title clip in the Timeline and click Add to My
Favorites. You can access your title preset in the Library by
choosing My Favorites in the Gallery drop-list.
If you want to save specific filter customizations for your title, in
the Options panel, click the Attributes tab, and after customizing
the filter settings, click the Add to My Favorites button
right of the filter list.

to the

Adding titles with the Subtitle Editor
The Subtitle Editor lets you add titles to video or audio clips. Easily add
on-screen narration to slideshows or song lyrics to music videos. Use
timecodes to match subtitles to clips precisely when adding subtitles
manually. You can also add subtitles automatically using Voice
Detection for more accurate results in less time.

To launch the Subtitle Editor
1

Select a video or audio clip in the Timeline.

2

Click the Subtitle Editor button

.

The Subtitle Editor dialog box appears.
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You can also launch the Subtitle Editor dialog box by rightclicking a selected video or audio clip in the Timeline and
choosing Subtitle Editor.

To add subtitles manually with the Subtitle Editor
1

In the Subtitle Editor dialog box, drag the Scrubber or play the
video to the part where you want to add titles.

2

Using the playback controls or manual scrubbing, click the Mark
in
and Mark out
subtitle.

buttons to define the duration of each

Each subtitle segment manually added will appear in the Subtitle
list.
Note: You can also click the Add a new subtitle button
to
add a subtitle segment on the current location of the scrubber. If
you click this button while the scrubber is on an existing subtitle
segment, the program will seamlessly create an end point of the
existing subtitle segment and the start point of a new subtitle
segment.
to display the audio
Click the Waveform view button
waveform of the video clip. This is helpful in determining areas
that have significant audio levels.

To add subtitles automatically with the Subtitle Editor
1

In the Voice Detection area, select settings in the Voice recording
quality and Sensitivity drop-lists that correspond to the
characteristics of the audio quality in your video.

2

Click Scan.
The program will automatically detect subtitling segments based
on audio levels.

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The subtitle segments are added to the Subtitle list.
Note: Voice Detection will be activated only if your video clip has
audio.

For better voice detection results, it is best to use videos with
clear speech and less background noise. This feature works
best for video tutorials, speeches and video presentations.

To import subtitle files using the Subtitle Editor
1

Click the Import subtitle file button
files that you want to import.

2

Click Open.

and browse for subtitle

The selected subtitles appear in the Subtitle list.
All subtitle segments previously added manually or
automatically, along with its properties, will be replaced by the
selected subtitle files.

To edit subtitles by using the Subtitle Editor
1

For each subtitle in the Subtitle list, click the default text to
activate the text box and type the text you want. Click outside the
text box when you finish editing the text.
Repeat this step for all subtitle segments.

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2

You can further customize titles in your project by using the
following options:

Part

Description
Delete selected subtitles — Deletes the
selected subtitle segment
Join subtitles — Merges two or more selected
subtitles
Time offset — Introduces timing offsets for the
entry and exit of subtitle segments
Text Options — Launches a separate dialog box
where you can customize the font attributes,
style and position of subtitles

3

Click OK.
All segments in the Subtitle list will appear on the Title Track in the
Timeline.

To save subtitle files using the Subtitle Editor
1

Click the Export subtitle file button
and browse for the path
where you want to save the subtitle file.

2

Click Save.

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Formatting text
You can format your text by changing the font, text alignment, and text
direction. For example, the text direction can be set for left-to-right,
right-to-left or vertical. You can also add borders and shadows, or
rotate the text. Add a text backdrop to superimpose your text on a
solid or gradient shape to make it stand out. You can also define how
long a title clip appears by adjusting the title clip duration.

Text direction is one of many formatting settings for titles.

To edit titles
1

In the Timeline, select the title clip on the Title Track and click the
Preview Window to enable title editing.

2

Modify the properties of the title clip by using the different
options in the Edit and Attribute tabs of the Options Panel.
If you plan to change the text direction, it’s best to set this before
you start to type.

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To rotate text in the Preview Window
1

In the Title Track, double-click a title.

2

In the Preview Window, yellow and purple handles appear around
the text.

3

Click and drag a purple handle to the position you want.
You can also rotate text using the Options Panel. In the Edit
tab, specify a value in Rotate by degree to apply a more precise
angle of rotation.

To add a text backdrop
1

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Enable the Text backdrop check box.

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2

Click the Customize text backdrop attributes button
the Text Backdrop dialog box.

to open

3

Choose the Solid background bar or Fit with text option.
If you choose Fit with text, choose a shape from the drop-list and
set a value in the Enlarge box.

4

In the Color setting area, choose the Solid or Gradient option,
and click the color swatch to set the background color.

5

If you choose Gradient, click an arrow button to set the direction
of the gradient and click the second color swatch to set a second
color.

6

In the Transparency box, enter a value. Higher numbers increase
the transparency.

7

Click OK.

To modify text border, transparency, and add shadows
• Click the Border/Shadow/Transparency button
and set
attributes using the Border/Shadow/Transparency dialog box.

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To apply a title preset
1

Click the Title clip on the Timeline and then double-click the title
on the Preview Window.

2

In the Edit tab, click the Title Preset Style drop-list and click a
thumbnail to apply the effect.

To adjust the duration of title clips
•

Do one of the following:
• In the Timeline, drag the handles of the clip
• Select the clip in the Timeline, open the Options Panel, click the
Edit tab, and enter a value in the Duration box.

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Applying text effects and animation
Apply motion to your text using title animation tools, such as Fade,
Moving Path, and Drop. You can also apply filters to your text using
preset Title Effects such as Bubble, Mosaic, and Ripple. The title filters
are in a separate Title Effects category.

To apply animation to the current text
1

In the Title Track, double-click a title.

2

In the Options area, click the Attribute tab.

3

Enable the Animation option, and mark the Apply check box.

4

Select a category from the Select the type of animation drop-list
and select the specific preset animation from the box under
Apply.

5

Click the Customize animation attributes button

to open a

dialog box where you can specify animation attributes.
6

In some animation effects, you can drag the Pause duration
handles that appear in the Navigation area of the Player panel to
specify how long the text will pause after it enters and before it
exits the screen.

Pause duration handles

To apply title filters to the current text
1

In the Library, click Filter and choose Title Effects in the Gallery
drop-list. The Library displays the thumbnails of various filters
under the Title Effects category.

2

Drag the filter thumbnail from the Library onto your clip in the
Timeline.

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Note: By default, the filter applied to a clip is always replaced
with the new filter dragged onto the clip. In the Attribute tab of
the Options Panel, clear Replace last filter to apply multiple filters
to a single title.
3

To customize the title filter, in the Options area, click the Attribute
tab, and do one of the following:
• Click a thumbnail in the drop-list to the left of Customize Filter.
• Click Customize Filter. Available options depend on the selected
filter.
Note: When there is more than one title filter applied to a clip,
you can change the order of filters by clicking the Move filter up
arrow
or Move filter down arrow
that appear to the right
of the filter list on the Attributes tab. Changing the order of the
title filters will have different effects on your clip.

Converting titles to image and animation files
You can convert a frame in a title clip to an image file (PNG) or you can
convert title clips with moving elements to animation files (UISX). The
PNG and UISX file are saved as Alpha channel files. Why convert titles?
You can add converted titles to overlay tracks, extending the creative
options and attributes that you can use. For more information, see
“Overlay clips” on page 155.
Ensure that the text in your title is final before converting—
converted text cannot be edited.

To convert a title to an image (PNG)
1

In the Timeline, click a clip in the Title track.

2

Scrub to the frame that you want to capture as an image.

3

Right-click the clip and choose Convert this frame to PNG.
The PNG file is added to the Library (Photos category).

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To convert a moving title to an animated file (UISX)
1

In the Timeline, click a Title track clip that includes moving
elements.

2

Right-click the clip and choose Convert to animation.
The UISX file is added to the Library (Videos category).

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Transitions
Transitions can help your movie switch smoothly from one scene to the
next. They can be applied to single clips or in between clips on all
tracks in the Timeline. Effective use of this feature can add a
professional touch to your movie.
This section contains the following topics:
•

Adding transitions

•

Saving and deleting transitions

Adding transitions
There are 16 types of transitions in the Library. For every type, you
choose a specific preset effect by using the thumbnails. For example,
you can choose from popular transition styles such as Dissolve,
Crossfade, and Fade to black.

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To add a transition
•

In the Edit workspace, do one of the following:
• Click Transitions in the Library and select from various
categories of transitions from the drop-list. Scroll through the
transitions in the Library. Select and drag an effect between two
video clips in the Timeline. Drop your effect and it will snap into
place. You can only drag and drop one transition at a time.
• Double-click a transition in the Library to automatically insert it
into the first empty transition slot between two clips. Repeat this
process to insert a transition at the next cut. To replace a
transition in your project, drag the new transition onto the
transition thumbnail for replacement in the Storyboard View or
Timeline View.
• Overlap two clips in the Timeline.

To add a transition automatically
1
142

Select Settings > Preferences > and click the Edit tab.
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2

Under Transition Effect, enable Automatically add transition
effect
The default transition is added automatically between clips.
Note: A default transition is always added automatically between
overlapping clips, whether the Automatically add transition
effect in Preferences is enabled or not.

To add a selected transition to all video track clips
1

Select the thumbnail of the transition.

2

Click the Apply current effect to video track button
or rightclick on the transition and select Apply current effect to video
track.

To add random transitions to all video track clips
•

Click the Apply random effect(s) to video track button

.

To customize a preset transition
1

Double-click a transition effect in the Timeline.

2

Modify the attributes or behavior of the transition in the Options
Panel.

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To further customize transitions, you may also do one of the
following:
• In Default transition effect duration, enter a value for the
number of seconds you want transitions to take place in
between clips.
• Choose a transition effect from the Default transition effect
drop-list.
• In Random effects, click the Customize button and select
transitions you want to use in your project when transitions are
added in between clips.

Saving and deleting transitions
You can collect your favorite transitions from different categories and
save them in the My Favorites folder. This way, you can easily find the
transitions that you use most often. You can also delete transitions that
you do not use.

To save a transition in My Favorites
1

Select the thumbnail of the transition.

2

Click the Add to My Favorites button
the Favorites Library list.

to add the transition in

To delete a transition from a project
•

Do one of the following:
• Click on the transition to be removed and press [Delete].
• Right-click on the transition and select Delete.
• Drag to separate two clips with transition effect.

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Graphics
The Graphic Library contains color clips, objects, frames and flash
animation.
This section contains the following topics:
•

Adding color clips

•

Adding color patterns

•

Adding backgrounds

•

Adding objects or frames

•

Adding Flash animations

• Customizing objects, frames, and animations

Adding color clips
Color clips are solid colored backgrounds. You can use the preset color
clips or create new color clips in the Library. For example, you can
insert a black color clip as background for end credits.

To select a color clip in the Color Library
1

Select Graphic from the Library Panel and choose Color from the
Gallery drop-list.

2

Choose the desired color as displayed in the Library and drag to
the Video or Overlay Track.

3

To add a color that is not in the Library, click the Add button
beside the Gallery drop-list. In the New Color Clip dialog box, you
can select a color either from Corel Color Picker or the Windows
Color Picker.

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145

4

Click the Options tab to set the Duration of the color clip in the
Options Panel.

Adding color patterns
Color patterns are decorative backgrounds. You can use the preset
color patterns or add an image that you want to use as a new color
pattern in the Library. For example, you can insert a color pattern as a
background for a title.

To select a pattern clip in the Color Patterns Library
1

Select Graphic from the Library panel and choose Color pattern
from the Gallery drop-list.

2

Choose the desired pattern as displayed in the Library and drag
to the Video or Overlay Track.

3

To add a pattern that is not in the Library, click the Add box
beside the Gallery drop-list. In the Browse Graphics dialog box,
choose the file that you want to add to the Library.

4

Click the Options tab to set the Duration of the color clip in the
Options Panel.

Adding backgrounds
You can add decorative backgrounds to your videos. The preset
backgrounds include a wide-range of colorful images that you can use
to add visual appeal to your videos.

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To select a background clip in the Backgrounds Library
1

Select Graphic from the Library panel and choose Background
from the Gallery drop-list.

2

Choose the desired background as displayed in the Library and
drag to the Video or Overlay Track.

3

To add a pattern that is not in the Library, click the Add box
beside the Gallery drop-list. In the Browse Graphics dialog box,
choose the file that you want to add to the Library.

4

Set the Duration of the color clip in the Options Panel.

Adding objects or frames
Add decorative objects or frames to your videos as Overlay clips.

To add an object or frame
1

Select Graphic from the Library panel and choose Object or
Frame from the Gallery drop-list.

2

Select an object or frame from the Library and drag it onto the
Overlay Track in the Timeline.

3

Click the Options tab to open the Options Panel.

4

Click the Attribute tab to resize and reposition the object or
frame.
Note: You can also resize an object by double-clicking it on the
Preview Window and dragging the yellow handles.

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147

Object

Frame

Adding Flash animations
Give more life to your videos by adding Flash animations as Overlay
clips.

To add a Flash animation
1

Select Graphic from the Library panel and choose Flash
Animation from the Gallery drop-list.

2

Select a Flash animation from the Library then drag it onto the
Overlay Track.

3

Click the Options tab to open the Options Panel.

4

Click the Attribute tab, customize your Flash Animation.

Customizing objects, frames, and animations
Use the various options available in the Edit and Attribute tabs to
customize your object and frame. You can add animation, apply
transparency, resize the object or frame, and more.

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Video filters
Video filters are effects that you can apply to clips in order to change
their style or appearance. Using filters is a creative way to enhance
your clips or correct flaws in your video. For example, you can make a
clip look like a painting or improve its color balance.
This section contains the following topics:
•

Applying filters

•

Marking filters as favorites

•

Applying multiple filters

•

Customizing filters

Applying filters
Filters let you apply a wide range of special effects and corrections. For
example, the following filters can be found in the Library:
•

Cropping — lets you crop clips. You can fill the frame with the
cropped result or show a border

•

Anti-Shake — reduces shake in your videos for a stabilizing effect

•

AutoSketch — applies a beautiful drawing effect to the video

Filters can be applied alone or in combination with the Video, Overlay,
Title, and Audio Tracks.

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To apply a video filter to a photo or video clip in the Video
Track
1

Click the Filter button
in the Library to display the thumbnails
of various filter samples.
If you want to display the filters in the Library by category, choose
a filter category from the Gallery drop-list box.

2

Select the clip in the Timeline then choose the video filter from
thumbnails shown in the Library.

3

Drag and drop the video filter onto your clip in the Video Track.

4

Click Customize Filter in the Attribute tab of the Options Panel to
customize the attributes of the video filter. Available options
depend on the selected filter.

5

Preview how your clip looks with the video filter applied to it using
the Navigator.
You can show or hide filters in the Library by type by clicking the
Show Video Filters button
or Show Audio Filters
.
button

Marking filters as favorites
You can collect your favorite filters from different categories by
marking them and then storing them in the My Favorites folder. This
way, you can easily find the filters that you use most often.

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To mark a filter as a favorite
1

Click the Filter button
in the Library to display the thumbnails
of various filter samples.

2

Choose the video filter that you want to mark as a favorite from
the thumbnails shown in the Library.

3

Click the Add to My Favorites button
My Favorites category.

to add the filter to the

You can also save specific filter customizations. In the Options
panel, click the Attribute tab for the filter, customize the filter
list or Customize Filter settings and click the Add to My
that displays to the right of the filter list.
Favorites button

To find and apply a favorite filter
1

In the Library panel, choose My Favorites category from the
Gallery drop-list box.

2

Choose the favorite video filter that you want to use from the
thumbnails shown in the Library.

Applying multiple filters
By default, the filter applied to a clip is always replaced with the new
filter dragged onto the clip. Uncheck Replace last filter to apply
multiple filters to a single clip. Corel VideoStudio allows you to apply
a maximum of five filters to a single clip.
You can also choose the filter to be previewed through the selection
in the view toggle. In the event that you choose to render your project,
only enabled filters will be included in your movie.

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When there is more than one video filter applied to a clip, you can
change the order of filters by clicking
or . Changing the order of
the video filters will have different effects on your clip.

Customizing filters
Corel VideoStudio allows you to customize video filters in a variety of
ways, such as by adding key frames to your clips. Key frames let you
specify a different attribute or behavior for your video filter. This gives
you the flexibility to determine how your video filter will look at any
point in a clip and to vary the intensity of an effect over time.

To set key frames for your clips
1

Drag and drop a video filter from the Library onto a clip on the
Timeline.

2

In the Options panel, click Customize Filter. The dialog box for
the video filter appears.
Note: The available settings are different for each video filter.

3

In the Key frame controls, drag the Scrubber or use the arrows to
go to the frame where you'd like to change the attributes of your
video filter.

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Key frame Controls

Note: You can use the mouse wheel to zoom in or out of the
Timeline Control bar for precise placement of key frames.
4

Click Add key frame
to set that frame as a key frame in the clip.
You can adjust the video filter settings for that particular frame.
Note: A diamond-shaped mark on the Timeline Control bar
appears and indicates that the frame is a key frame in the clip.

5

Repeat steps 3 and 4 to add more key frames to your clip.

6

Use the Timeline controls to edit or to go to a key frame in the
clip.
• To delete a key frame, click Remove key frame

.

to reverse the sequence of key
• Click Reverse key frames
frames on the Timeline such that the sequence starts with the
last key frame and ends with the first key frame.
• To move to the succeeding key frame, click Go to next key
frame

.

• To move to the key frame prior to the one selected, click Go to
previous key frame
Video filters

.
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7

Click Fade In
filter.

and Fade Out

to establish fade points in your

8

Adjust the video filter settings according to your preferences.

9

Preview the changes you've made by clicking Play
Preview Window of the dialog box.

in the

10 Click OK when finished.

Note: To preview the clip with the video filter applied, use the
Preview Window or an external device such as a TV monitor or DV
camcorder.
To choose the display medium, click , then click
Preview Playback Options dialog box.

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Overlay clips
Adding multiple Overlay Tracks gives you more creative possibilities
for your movie. You can superimpose clips over a background video
with portions of the overlay being transparent, use a video mask, or
add objects and frames to your video and control how they blend with
the background.
This section contains the following topics:
•

Adding clips to overlay tracks

•

Adjusting overlay clips

•

Combining Overlay clips to create an Ultra HD (4K) video

•

Applying motion to an overlay clip

•

Adjusting the overall transparency of overlay clips

•

Adding borders to overlay clips

•

Blending overlay clips with the background

•

Adding a mask frame

•

Using video masks with overlay clips

Adding clips to overlay tracks
Drag media files to the Overlay Track on the Timeline to add them as
overlay clips for your project.

To add a clip to the Overlay Track
1

In the Library, select the media folder that contains the Overlay
clip that you want to add to your project.

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155

2

Drag the media file from the Library to the Overlay Track on the
Timeline.

Note: You can also use color clips as Overlay clips. To add more
tracks, see “Adding and swapping tracks” on page 78.
3

To customize the Overlay clip, click the Attribute tab. The Overlay
clip is then resized to a preset size and positioned at the center.
Use the options in the Attribute tab to apply direction/style to the
Overlay clip, add filters, resize and reposition the clip, and more.

Adjusting overlay clips
Achieving different effects for your projects is easy when you know
how to use Overlay clips and tracks.

To split a clip in the Video and Overlay Tracks
1

Click Project as the Play mode and drag the slider to the part you
want to cut.

2

Click the Split Clip button

.

To reposition an Overlay clip
•
156

Do one of the following:
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• Drag the Overlay clip to the desired area on the Preview
Window. It is recommended that you keep the Overlay clip
within the title safe area.
• In Timeline View, click on the Overlay clip and click Open
Options Panel. In the Attribute tab, click Alignment Options
and choose from a menu of position options.

To resize an Overlay clip
•

In the Preview Window, drag the handles on the Overlay clip to
resize it.
Note: If you drag the yellow corner handle, it will keep the aspect
ratio when you resize the clip.

To specify the alignment and size of the Overlay clip
•

Click Alignment Options in the Attribute tab and click your
desired option to achieve your desired effect.

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157

This resizes and adjusts the position of the Overlay clip.

To distort the Overlay clip
•

Drag the green nodes at the corners of the outline box that
surround the Overlay clip.

Dragging the green node distorts an overlay clip.

When you select the green node, the cursor becomes a smaller arrow
with a small black box at its tail.
Hold [Shift] while dragging the green nodes to keep the
distortion within the outline box of the current clip.

Combining Overlay clips to create an Ultra HD (4K)
video
Some Ultra HD (4K resolution) videos are created by combining four
full HD files shot with a 4K camera. Apart from adding Overlay effects,
you can use Overlay Tracks to assemble HD videos into one Ultra HD
(4K) movie.

To merge HD files using Overlay clips
1

In the Library, select the media folder that contains the four HD
files that you want to assemble.
Each file represents a quadrant of the Ultra HD (4K) video.

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2

Drag each file from the Library to an Overlay Track on the
Timeline.

3

Resize the Overlay clips to make them fit into the Preview
Window.

4

Reposition the Overlay clips. For more information, see “Adjusting
overlay clips” on page 156.

Even if you have not rendered the video, the Ultra HD (4K)
video can be imported into a new project as a *.vsp file for
easier editing.

Applying motion to an overlay clip
To apply motion to an Overlay clip
1

In the Attribute tab, select the direction and style by which the
Overlay clip will move to or from the screen under Direction/Style
option.

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159

2

Click a specific arrow to set where you want your clip to enter and
exit in your movie.
You can rotate the clip or fade it in and out.
Pause duration determines how long your pause will be in the
designated area before the clip exits the screen. If you applied
motion to the Overlay clip, drag the Trim markers to set the
Pause duration.

Adjusting the overall transparency of overlay clips
You can quickly adjust the overall transparency of an overlay clip to
achieve a semi-transparent effect. For more control over how the
overlay clip blends with the background, see “Blending overlay clips
with the background” on page 161.
You can also adjust the transparency of tracks using Track
Transparency mode. See “Track transparency” on page 120.

To apply transparency to an Overlay clip
1

In the Attribute tab, click Mask & Chroma Key.

2

Drag the Transparency slider to set the opacity of the Overlay clip.

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Adding borders to overlay clips
You can add a border to an overlay clip. For example, you add a white
border around an image to make it look more like a photo.

To add a border to an Overlay clip
1

In the Attribute tab, click Mask & Chroma Key.

2

Click the Border arrow keys to set the thickness of the border for
the Overlay clip.

3

Click the Border color box located beside the arrow keys to set the
color of the border.

Blending overlay clips with the background
You can specify how overlay clips blend with the background by using
different “Key” options:
•

Chroma Key — used to remove a specific color from an overlay
clip. For example, if you capture a subject against a “green screen”
background or cover part of a subject with green, Chroma Key
can be used to remove the green. You can then place the subject
on another background to change the surroundings or create a
special effect such as the appearance of a hovering object.

•

Gray Key — adjusts the transparency of the overlay clip based on
tone (light/dark values), rather than color.

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161

•

Multiply — multiplies the value of the overlay colors with the
underlying colors and divides by 255. The result is darker than the
original colors. White has no blend effect; black always blends to
black. You can use the Blend/Opacity slider to adjust the
transparency.

•

Add Key — adds the color values of the overlay clip with the
values of the underlying colors. You can use the Blend/Opacity
slider to adjust the transparency.

The settings available depend on the type of key that you choose.
Experiment with the settings to achieve the look you want.

Without Chroma Key

With Chroma Key

To blend an overlay clip with the background by using Key
settings
1

Click Mask & Chroma Key in the Attribute tab.

2

Enable the Apply Overlay Options check box, then choose one of
the following settings from the Type drop-list:
• Chroma Key
• Gray Key
• Multiply
• Add Key
If you choose Chroma Key, use the eye dropper tool
to pick a
color in the Preview Window and adjust the color similarity value

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(to the right of the eye dropper tool). The transparency effect
appears in the Preview Window.
3

Experiment with any of the following settings to achieve the
results you want (availability of controls depends on the Type you
select):
• Gamma — affects image contrast and can be used to lighten
(move control to the right) or darken (move control to the left)
the overall image
• Min — can be moved to the right to darken the image’s lightest
pixels
• Max — can be moved to the left to lighten the image’s darkest
pixels
• Cutoff — can be moved to the right to set a new black point for
the image (more black in the image).
• Threshold — can be moved to the left to set a new white point
for the image (more white in the image).
If you choose Multiply or Add Key, you can also adjust the Blend/
Opacity setting to adjust transparency.
You can crop an overlay clip by adjusting the Width and Height
values.
You can invert the blend settings by enabling the Invert check
box.

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Adding a mask frame
Adding a mask or a matte to an overlay clip applies a shape around it
that you can render opaque or transparent.

To add a mask frame
1

Click Mask & Chroma Key in the Attribute tab.

2

Click Apply Overlay Options then choose Mask Frame from the
Type drop-list.

3

Select a mask frame.
If you want to choose a mask that you have created, you can
import it by clicking the Add mask item(s) button
browsing for the image file.

4

, and

Watch the Preview Window to see how the new settings affect the
image.

Note: You can use any image file for a mask. If your mask is not in
the required 8-bit bitmap format, Corel VideoStudio

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automatically converts the mask. You can use programs such as
Corel PaintShop Pro and CorelDRAW to create an image mask.

Using video masks with overlay clips
A video mask is an animated way to reveal the content of an overlay
clip. It is similar to a transition in function. You can apply an existing
video mask, create and import your own video mask, or import a thirdparty video mask.

A video mask is a creative way to reveal the underlying
content.

There are many ways to make your own video masks. For example,
start a new project, and from the Graphics category in the Library, add
a black color swatch and a white color swatch to the Timeline. Apply a
transition and match the duration to the two swatches. Save your work
to a video file (such as MPEG 4, AVI, or MOV). You can then import the
file as a video mask.
You can also use the Mask Creator to create video masks. For more
information, see “Working with the Mask Creator” on page 115.

To apply a video mask to an overlay clip
1

In the Timeline, select an overlay clip.

2

Click Mask & Chroma Key in the Attribute tab.

3

Click Apply Overlay Options then choose Video Mask from the
Type drop-list.

4

Select a mask.

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If you want to choose a mask that you have created, you can
import it by clicking the Add mask item(s) button
browsing for the video file.
5

, and

Watch the Preview Window to see how the new settings affect the
image.
You can remove files from the video masks list by clicking the
thumbnail for the mask, and clicking the Remove mask item
.
button
You can create a folder for video masks in the default user
content folder: ...Documents/Corel VideoStudio Pro/X10.0/.

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Motion tracking
Corel VideoStudio lets you create tracking paths in video clips and
track particular elements in your video. Motion Tracking eliminates the
multiple and repetitive steps of adding objects into the Timeline and
the use of key frames to induce movement.
Furthermore, the motion tracking feature lets you create seamless
optical illusions that allow for titles to be embedded into the video
clips and follow camera movement, just like shooting video with titles
originally in the footage!
This section contains the following topics:
•

Tracking motion of video objects

•

Matching motion to a tracking path

•

Customizing motion

Tracking motion of video objects
The Track Motion feature allows you to track the motion of a point or
area in a video and automatically generate a tracking path in the
process.
Track Motion works in tandem with the Match Motion feature. Match
Motion allows you to make your overlays and titles automatically
follow the tracking path that you create.
If you prefer to manually animate overlays and titles to match
your main background video, you can use the Customize
Motion feature.
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Motion Tracking interface basics
5
1
6

7
8

2
3
4

Track Motion dialog box

Part

Description

1 — Tracker

Specifies the object being tracked to create the
tracking path.
This can also appear as an area depending on
the selected tracker type.

2 — Playback
Control

Buttons that control video playback.

3 — Timeline
Control

The Video Timeline along with zoom and track
in/out controls.

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Part

Description

4 — Tracker Control

Buttons and options that let you control the
properties of the trackers, tracking paths and
matched objects.

5 — Preview
Window

Shows the current video being played.

6 — Matched
object

Where the matched object is placed.

7 — Tracking path

The path of the motion tracked by the program.

8 — Timecode

Lets you jump directly to a specific part of the
video by specifying the exact timecode.

Track Motion buttons and options
Track Motion — Tracks the motion of the
selected tracker in the video clip
automatically.
Reset to default position — Discards all
actions.
Track in / Track out — Specifies a working
range in the video clip where motion is
tracked.
Zoom in / Zoom out — Adjusts your view of
the Video Timeline.
Show tracking path — Shows or hides the
tracking path in the Preview Window.
The eye on each tracker indicates its status.
When enabled, an open eye appears and the
tracker is visible in the Preview Window.
When disabled, the closed eye appears and
the selected tracker is hidden.

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Add tracker / Remove tracker — Adds and
removes trackers
Rename tracker — Renames the active
tracker
Save to path library — Saves the active
paths to the path library.
Set tracker as point / Set tracker as area /
Set multi-point tracker— Lets you choose a
single tracking point, a set tracking area, or a
dynamic multi-point area.
Apply/hide mosaic — Applies a mosaic
effect over the tracked object. This button
lets you blur the area of the tracked object.
You can choose a rectangular or circular
mosaic.
Adjust Mosaic size — Lets you set the size
for the mosaic pattern
Add matched object — Adds a matched
object and lets you adjust the position from
the Position drop-list or the Preview
Window.
Cancel — Closes the Track Motion dialog
box and discards any changes made on the
video.
OK — Closes the Track Motion dialog box
and keeps the path tracked as a video
attribute.

To launch the Track Motion dialog box
•

You can do one of the following:
• Select a video file on the Video Track and click the Track Motion
button

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on the Toolbar.
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• Click Tools > Track Motion and choose a video file.
• Right-click a video clip on the Video Track of the Timeline and
choose Track Motion.

To track the motion of video objects
1

Click Tools > Track Motion.

2

Browse for the video that you want to use and click Open. This
opens the Track Motion dialog box.
In this example, a video of a boy walking by the lake is selected.

3

Drag the tracker to the part of the video that you want to track.
In the example, the tracker is dragged to the face of the boy. The
area is magnified to give you a closer view of your selection.

4

In the Tracker type area, choose one of the following trackers:
• Set tracker as point (default)

— lets you set a single

tracking point.
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• Set tracker as area

— lets you set a fixed tracking area.

This gives you a larger sample area but also lets you set the
boundaries for a Mosaic blur. You can adjust the shape and size
of the tracker by dragging the corner nodes.
• Set multi-point tracking

— lets you set a dynamic tracking

area that adjusts in size and shape as the object moves closer or
further from the camera or changes angles. Drag the four nodes
to the inside edges of the area that you want to track. This type
of tracker automatically applies a Mosaic blur. For more
information see “To blur parts of tracked objects” on page 190.
5

Click the Track Motion button

.

The video is played as the tracking path is generated. If Show
tracking path is selected, the tracking path is displayed and
highlighted once the tracking process is completed.

6

Click OK.
It is easier to track points or areas in your video that are
distinctly in contrast with other video elements. Avoid choosing
pixels that may blend with similar pixels in the video.

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Matching motion to a tracking path
Using the Match Motion feature, you can automatically match the
motion of overlays and titles with a tracking path to create the effect
of one element following another. For example, you can identify a
moving person in a video by matching a title name to his tracking path.

4
5
6
7
8
9

1
2
3

Match Motion dialog box

Motion tracking

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Part

Description

1 — Playback Control

Buttons that control video playback.

2 — Timeline Control

The Video Timeline along with zoom
controls.

3 — Attribute Panel

Defines the Position, Size, Opacity, Rotation,
Shadow, Border, Mirror and Ease in/out
controls.

4 — Preview Window

Shows the current video being played.

5 — Matched object

Specifies where the matched object is placed,
which can be a title or overlay. This is
applicable only in Match Motion.

6 — Motion path

The path of the motion as manually defined.
This is shown only in the Customize Motion
dialog box.

7 — Object distortion
window

Controls the orientation of the video clip /
overlay object.

8 — Key frame
Control

Adds, removes and controls the position /
offset of key frames.

9 — Timecode

Lets you jump directly to a specific part of the
video by specifying the exact timecode.

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Match Motion / Customize Motion buttons and options
Add keyframe — Adds a keyframe
Remove keyframe — Removes a keyframe
Go to previous keyframe — Jumps to the
previously available keyframe
Reverse keyframe — Reverses the current
keyframe
Move keyframe to the left — Moves the
current key frame one step to the left
Move keyframe to the right — Moves the
current key frame one step to the right
Go to next keyframe — Jumps to the next
available keyframe
Tracker menu — Lets you select the tracker
that the matched object will follow. This is
shown only in the Match Motion dialog box.
Reset — Discards all actions. This is shown
only in the Customize Motion dialog box.
Save to — Saves the active paths to the path
library. This is shown only in the Customize
Motion dialog box.
Cancel — Closes the Customize Motion /
Match Motion dialog box and discards any
changes made on the video.
OK — Closes the Customize Motion / Match
Motion dialog box and saves the path
tracked as a video clip attribute.

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Match Motion / Customize Motion right-click menu

Match Motion / Customize Motion right-click menu
Add key frame

Adds a key frame

Remove key frame

Removes a key frame

Keep Aspect Ratio

Maintains the width to height ratio when you
resize the video clip or overlay object.

Reset Distort

Reverts to the original aspect ratio after you
distort the clip or object.

Show object
distortion window

Displays/hides the object distortion window
that controls the orientation of the video clip
/ overlay object.

Show Grid Lines

Launches the Grid Line Options window that
modifies the grid line settings.

Show background
video

Displays/hides the other tracks in the
Timeline.

Show result in
preview window

Enables/disables simultaneous display of
edits on the preview window.

Adjust view size
(Mouse wheel)

Changes zoom settings to 100%, 50%, or
33%. Alternatively, you can zoom in or out
using the mouse wheel.

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To launch the Match Motion dialog box
•

Right-click an overlay clip on the Timeline and choose Match
Motion.

To match motion to a tracking path
1

Insert a video with tracking path in the video track.

2

Insert a title clip in the overlay track and adjust its properties to
match your project.
In this example, the name of the boy in the video is added to the
title track.

3

Right-click the title in the title track and select Match Motion. This
opens the Match Motion dialog box.

4

If you have more than one tracker, select the tracker that you want
to match.
In the sample video, Tracker 01, which represents the tracking
path of the boy, is selected.

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177

5

Adjust the properties of your title depending on the requirements
of your project.
Each time you set a value, a key frame is added.

In this example, Offset values are adjusted to set the ideal distance
between the boy and the title. The Size and Opacity values are
also adjusted to make sure that the title is visible and yet a bit
transparent.
Note: If you need to turn and move the clip around the video,
you can set the values under Offset and Rotation. You also have
the option to add a shadow and border, or mirror your image.
Clicking the Ease in/Ease out button
178

/

allows the motion
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to start out slowly or slow down as it comes to an end. Drag the
slider to control the timing.
6

Play the video to test your animation. When done, click OK.
The result of our sample project is shown below.

You can tweak the properties of your overlays and titles by
using key frames, dragging the tracker and adjusting values in
the Match Motion dialog box.

To unlink overlay clips from tracking paths
•

Right-click the overlay clip and select Remove Motion.

Customizing motion
Using the Customize Motion feature, you can manually match the
motion of overlays and titles with the motion of elements in a
background video without reference to any existing tracking
information. This means that you can define your own motion path
and modify various properties to create complex motion effects.

Motion tracking

179

4
5

6
7
8

1
2
3

Customize Motion dialog box

Part

Description

1 — Playback Control

Buttons that control video playback.

2 — Timeline Control

The Video Timeline along with zoom
controls.

3 — Attribute Panel

Defines the Position, Size, Opacity, Rotation,
Shadow, Border, Mirror and Ease in/out
controls.

4 — Preview Window

Shows the current video being played.

5 — Motion path

The path of the motion as manually defined.
This is shown only in the Customize Motion
dialog box.

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Part

Description

6 — Object distortion
window

Controls the orientation of the video clip /
overlay object.

7 — Keyframe Control

Adds, removes and controls the position /
offset of key frames.

8 — Timecode

Lets you jump directly to a specific part of the
video by specifying the exact timecode.

To launch the Customize Motion dialog box
•

Right-click a video clip on the Timeline and choose Customize
Motion.
You can also open the Customize Motion dialog box by
clicking the Attributes tab from the Options Panel, and then
clicking the Advanced Motion option. This option is available
only when a clip is selected on the Overlay Track.

To customize a motion path
1

Right-click a background video or an overlay clip in the Timeline
and select Customize Motion. The Customize Motion dialog box
opens.
In this example, the title is shown with a straight line motion path.

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181

2

Change the shape of your motion path by dragging line segments
and key frame nodes.

Note: Key frame nodes are automatically added every time you
move to another frame and make a modification. You can also
create a key frame node by dragging the scrubber and clicking
the Add key frame button
3

.

Adjust the properties of your title depending on the requirements
of your project.
Each time you set a value, a key frame is added.
The example below shows the title after adjusting Position, Size
and Rotation values.

Note: You also have the option to change the opacity, add a
shadow and border, and mirror your image by adjusting the
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values under Opacity, Shadow, Border, and Mirror. Clicking the
Ease in/Ease out button
/
allows the motion to start out
slowly or slow down as it comes to an end. Drag the slider to
control the easing in and out timing.
4

Play the video to test your animation. When done, click OK.
If an existing tracking path is customized, existing match
motion information in the video will be converted to a generic
moving path.

Motion tracking

183

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Tracking paths
Corel VideoStudio lets you track specific points or areas to create a
moving path. This path represents the location of the selected point or
area within the sequence of video frames.
Once you have tracking paths, you can choose to add matched objects
around the tracker area or blur video elements using the tracker.
This section contains the following topics:
•

Adjusting tracking paths

•

Using objects on tracking paths

•

Using the Path Library

Adjusting tracking paths
You can fine-tune or modify the behavior of a tracking path by
manually resetting track points. For more information on creating
tracking paths, see “Tracking motion of video objects” on page 167.

To adjust tracking paths
1

Select a video file on the Video Track and click the Track Motion
button

on the Toolbar.

2

From the list of trackers, select the tracker that you want to adjust.

3

Drag the Scrubber to locate the point where you want to adjust
the path.

4

Drag the tracker to the new key frame position.

Tracking paths

185

5

Click the Track Motion button

to retrack the path. The

tracker continues tracking using the new key frame position.
Adjusting the track points allows you to fine-tune or smoothen
the movement of matched objects.

To define the tracking path duration
1

Drag the Scrubber to the point where you want to start motion
tracking. Click the Track in button

2

.

Drag the Scrubber to the point where you want to end motion
tracking. Click the Track out button

.

The tracking path duration is defined.

To extend tracking path duration
1

Drag the Scrubber to the untracked area where you want to end
motion tracking.

2

Click the Track Motion button

.

The motion of the tracked object and the extended path are
generated.
button
Dragging the Scrubber and clicking the Track in
removes the current path and marks a new starting point.

To reset tracking paths
You can reset the current tracking path and select a new area to track
by doing any of the following:
•

186

Drag the tracker point to another location.

Corel VideoStudio X10

•

Drag the Scrubber to another location and click the Track in
button
.

• Click the Reset button

.

To show or hide trackers
• Click

or

to show or hide trackers.

To add trackers
1

Click the Add a new tracker button
to add the second tracker.
A new tracker appears on the screen and a new tracker is added
to the list.

2

Drag the tracker to the part of the video that you want to track.

Tracking paths

187

In our example, the second tracker is dragged to a stationary
fishing ladder on the lake.
3

Click the Track Motion button

.

If Show tracking path is selected, the paths of both trackers are
displayed and the selected tracker is highlighted.
In the example, Tracker 1 tracks the boy while Tracker 2 tracks the
stationary fishing ladder on the lake. Since the camera is panning
to the right, the result shows the path of Tracker 1 moving to the
right and the path of Tracker 2 moving to the left.

4

Click OK.
To remove a tracker, select a tracker and click the Remove
tracker button
.

To rename trackers
1

Select a tracker and click the Rename tracker button

2

Enter the new tracker name in the Rename Tracker dialog box.

3

Click OK.

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Using objects on tracking paths
To add matched objects
1

On the Track Motion window, enable Add matched object.
A matched object appears on the Preview Window.

2

Adjust the position of the matched object by doing one of the
following:
• Choose an option from the Position drop-list.
• Drag the matched object marker to your preferred position in
the Preview Window.

3

In the Preview Window, drag the corners of the matched object to
adjust its size.

4

Proceed with motion tracking as specified in previous procedures
to generate the tracking path.

5

Click OK.
The Track Motion dialog box closes and a placeholder is added to
the Overlay track.

Tracking paths

189

6

Browse for the media clip you want from the Library and drag it
over the placeholder on the Timeline. While dragging over the
placeholder, press [Ctrl] to snap the new media clip into the
placeholder’s location and replace the clip.

To blur parts of tracked objects
1

In the Track Motion dialog box, click the Apply Mosaic button
to enable the mosaic and then click the arrow beside the
button to choose a Rectangle or Circle mosaic.
Note: If you used a multi-point tracker, the shape options are not
available because the shape is dynamic and determined by the
movement of the object.
The prospective blurred area will appear in the Preview Window as
a grid.

2

190

Adjust the size of the grid to cover parts that you want to blur by
dragging the nodes at the corners of the grid and adjust the value
in the Adjust mosaic size box.
Note: Options for matched object will be grayed-out when you
enable this feature.

Corel VideoStudio X10

3

Proceed with motion tracking as specified in previous procedures
to generate the tracking path.
The area of the tracked object will have a mosaic-like effect when
you view the video in the Preview Window of the main program.

4

Click OK.
In combination with motion tracking, this feature is most useful
in blurring out elements that you do not want to show in your
video. Some examples of such are blurring out faces of people
to protect their identity and covering vehicle license plates for
security or obscuring company logos that are trademarked.

Tracking paths

191

Using the Path Library
You can add motion behavior to a clip in the main video track or in the
overlay track by dragging a preset path from the Path Library to the
clip in the Timeline.

To save tracking paths in the Track Motion dialog box
1

Select a tracking path name and click the Save to Path Library
button

.

The Save to Path Library dialog box opens.
2

Select the folder location for the path.

3

Click OK.
Select Export all visible paths to save all the visible tracking
paths. All saved tracking paths will be converted to generic
moving paths without the speed and time properties
previously associated with it.

To import paths to the Path Library
1

Click the Import path button

2

Browse for the path file and click Open.

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.

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To export paths from the Path Library
1

Click the Export path button

. The Export Path dialog box

opens.
2

Click the Browse button

to select the path file.

3

Enter a name for the path folder.

4

Click OK.
If you export a project using Smart Package, tracking
information in the project is also exported and the
corresponding path folder is automatically generated in the
computer where the smart package is opened.

To reset the Path Library
•

Click Settings > Library Manager > Reset Library.

Tracking paths

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Audio
Sound is one of the elements that determine the success of your video
production. Corel VideoStudio allows you to add music, narration, and
sound effects to your project.
The Audio feature in Corel VideoStudio consists of four tracks. You can
insert narrations on the Voice Track and the background music or
sound effects on the Music Track.
This section contains the following topics:
•

Adding audio files

•

Using Audio Ducking to automatically adjust volume

•

Splitting an audio track from a video clip

•

Using Auto Music

•

Using the Clip Volume Control

•

Trimming and cutting audio clips

•

Stretching audio duration

•

Applying fade-in/out

•

Using the Sound Mixer

•

Adjusting stereo channels

•

Using the Surround Sound Mixer

•

Mixing Surround Sound

•

Duplicating an audio channel

•

Applying audio filters

Audio

195

Adding audio files
You can add audio files to your project in any of the following ways:
•

Add audio files to the Library from a local or network drive. (Triple
Scoop royalty-free music is included in the Library).

•

Rip audio from CD

•

Record a voice-over clip

• Use Auto Music
Note: You can also extract audio from a video file.

To add an audio file to the Library
•

Click the Import Media Files button
in your computer.

to browse for audio files

After you import audio files to the Library, you can add them to
your project by dragging them from the Library to the Timeline.

To add voice-over narration
1

Move the Scrubber to the section of the video where you want to
insert your voice-over.

2

In Timeline view, click the
Record/Capture Option button
and select Voice-over. The Adjust Volume dialog box appears.
Note: The program prompts you when there is an existing voiceover clip at the current project cue position. Make sure that a clip
is not selected by clicking on an empty area in the Timeline.

3

Speak into the microphone and check if the meter responds
accordingly. You can use the Windows audio mixer to adjust the
level of the microphone.

4

Click Start and begin speaking into the microphone.

5

Press [Esc] or [Space] to end recording.

6

The best way to record narrations is to do the recording in 10 to
15-second sessions. This makes it easier to remove a badly

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recorded narration and redo it. To remove, just select the clip on
the Timeline and press [Delete].

To import music from an audio CD
1

In Timeline view, click the
Record/Capture Option button
and click Import from audio CD.
The Rip CD Audio dialog box appears.

2

Select the tracks to be imported in the Track List.

3

Click Browse and select the destination folder where the imported
files will be saved.

4

Click Rip to start importing the audio tracks.

Using Audio Ducking to automatically adjust volume
Audio ducking (similar concept to side-chaining) is used to
automatically lower the volume of one track so that you can hear
another track better. For example, if you have a video project that
includes music and voiceover, you can use audio ducking to
automatically decrease the music volume when the narrator is
speaking. You can adjust the threshold that triggers “ducking” and you
can adjust by how much the volume of the background track will drop.

To use Audio Ducking
1

In the Timeline view (Edit workspace), ensure that the track you
want to apply “ducking” to is below the video, overlay, or voice
track that you want to feature.

Audio

197

2

Right-click the music track that you want to “duck” and choose
Audio Ducking.

3

In the Audio Ducking dialog box, adjust the following sliders:
• Ducking Level — determines the volume decrease. Higher
numbers indicate lower volume.
• Sensitivity — determines the volume threshold (read from the
track above the selected track) required for ducking to occur.
You will likely need to readjust the Sensitivity slider to achieve
the results you want.
• Attack — determines the time it takes to lower the volume to
the Ducking Level setting after the Sensitivity threshold is met.
• Decay — determines the time it takes to return to the regular
clip volume from the Ducking Level

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In these examples, the voiceover is the purple track
and the music is the blue track. The yellow line in each
example indicates when and by how much the volume
of the music track is lowered by applying different
Sensitivity settings for Audio Ducking: Top = 0, Middle
= 2, and Bottom = 30. In this example, a setting of 2
worked best.

You can tweak Audio Ducking results manually by dragging,
adding, or removing keyframe nodes on the yellow volume
line.

Splitting an audio track from a video clip
Corel VideoStudio lets you split the audio portion from an existing
video clip into an audio track.

Audio

199

Video clips that contain audio display an Audio icon

To split an audio track from a video clip
1

Select the video clip.

2

Right-click the video clip and select Split Audio.
This generates a new audio track.
Once you split an audio track from a video clip, you can apply
an audio filter to the audio track. For more information, see
“Applying audio filters” on page 208.

Using Auto Music
The Auto Music feature of Corel VideoStudio lets you easily create
high-quality sound tracks from the ScoreFitter library of royalty-free
music. Songs have different variations to help you set the right feel for
your video production.
You can also access ScoreFitter music in the Library by clicking the
Scorefitter Music folder.

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To add music with Auto Music
1

Click the Auto Music button

in the Toolbar.

The Auto Music panel opens.
1

In the Category list, select the type of music you want.

2

In the Song list, select a song.

3

In the Version list, select the version of the song.
To listen to your selection, click the Play Selected Song button

1

When you find the song you want, click the Add to Timeline
button
.
Note: Enable Auto Trim to automatically trim the audio clip or cut
down to the desired duration.

Balancing the volume of multiple clips with Normalize
Audio
Normalize Audio automatically balances the volume level for a group
of selected audio and video clips. Whether the audio is are barely
audible, or loud and clear, Normalize Audio ensures a consistent
volume range across all the clips. The volume levels of the selected
clips are analyzed and the volume level of the clips with lower volumes
is raised to be consistent with the clip that has the highest volume
level. For information about adjusting clip volume manually, see
“Using the Clip Volume Control” on page 202.

To apply Normalize Audio to multiple clips with audio
1

In the Edit workspace, select the audio clips that you want to
balance.
To select multiple clips, hold Shift and click the clips.

2

Right-click a selected clip and choose Normalize Audio.

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Using the Clip Volume Control
You will find the volume control in the Music & Voice tab. Clip volume
represents the percentage of the original recorded volume. Values
range from 0 to 500%, where 0% completely silences the clip and
100% retains the original recorded volume.

Trimming and cutting audio clips
After recording voice and music, you can easily trim your audio clips in
the Timeline.

To trim audio clips
•

Do one of the following:
• Drag a handle, either from the beginning or end, to shorten a
clip.
Note: In the Timeline, a selected audio clip has two handles that
can be used for trimming.

• Drag the Trim markers.

• Move the Scrubber and click the Mark-in / Mark-out buttons.

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To split the audio clip
•

Click the Split Clip button

to split the clip.

Stretching audio duration
The time stretch feature allows you to stretch an audio clip to match
video duration without distorting its pitch. Normally, stretching audio
clips to fit the project results in a distorted sound. The time stretch
feature will make the audio clip sound like it is just played in a slower
tempo.
When you stretch an audio clip by 50-150%, the sound will not
be distorted however, if stretched below or above that range
the sound may be distorted.

To stretch the duration of an audio clip
1

Click on an audio clip in the Timeline or Library and open the
Options Panel.

2

In the Music & Voice tab panel, click Speed/Time-lapse to open
the Speed/Time-lapse dialog box.

3

Enter a value in Speed or drag the slider to change the speed of
the audio clip. A slower speed makes the clip’s duration longer
while a faster speed makes it shorter.
Note: You can specify how long the clip will play in Time stretch
duration. The speed of the clip will automatically adjust to the
specified duration. This feature will not trim the clip when you
specify a shorter time.

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You can stretch the time of an audio clip on the
Timeline by holding [Shift] then dragging the handles
on the selected clip.

Applying fade-in/out
Background music that starts and ends gradually is commonly used to
create smooth transitions.

To apply fade effects to your audio clips
•

Click the Fade-in

and Fade-out

buttons.

Using the Sound Mixer
The key to making narrations, background music, and existing audio
of your video clips blend well together is to control the relative volume
of your clips.

To blend the different audio tracks in your project
1

Click the Sound Mixer button

on the Toolbar.

Note: If the Audio Type is set to 3/2 in the Project Properties
Audio Settings, the Surround Sound Mixer is displayed. If the
Audio Type is set to 2/0 Stereo mode, the 2-Channel Mixer is
displayed. You can verify these settings by going to Settings >
Project Properties, clicking Edit in the Project Properties dialog
box, and then clicking the Compression tab in the Edit Profile
Options dialog box.
For information about using the Surround Sound Mixer, see
“Using the Surround Sound Mixer” on page 205.

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For information about using the 2-Channel Mixer, see “Adjusting
stereo channels” on page 205.

Adjusting stereo channels
In stereo files (two channels), a single waveform represents the left and
right channels.

To use stereo mode
1

Go to Settings > Project Properties.

2

In the Project Properties dialog box, choose a format from the
Project format drop-list.

3

Click Edit.

4

In the Edit Profile Options dialog box, click the Compression tab.

5

In the Audio format drop-list, choose Dolby Digital Audio.

6

In the Audio Settings area, choose 2/0 (L, R) from the Audio Type
drop-list box.

7

Click the Sound Mixer button

8

Click on the Music Track.

9

Click Play in the Options Panel.

in the toolbar.

10 Click the music note symbol in the center of the Surround Sound

Mixer and adjust depending on your preferred sound position.
Note: Moving the note symbol will affect the sound coming from
your preferred direction.
11 Drag Volume to adjust the volume level of the audio.

Using the Surround Sound Mixer
Unlike a stereo stream that carries only two audio channels, Surround
Sound has five separate audio channels encoded into one file which is
delivered to five speakers and one sub-woofer.
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The Surround Sound Mixer has all the controls to position sounds
around the listener, outputting audio through the 5.1 configuration of
multiple speakers. You can also use this mixer to adjust the volume for
stereo files, making it sound as if the audio moves from one speaker
to another.

Mixing Surround Sound
All audio channels in Surround Sound have a set of similar controls
that you will find in the stereo configuration of this panel, plus a few
more specific controls.
•

Six-channel VU Meter — Front Left, Front Right, Center, Subwoofer, Surround Left, Surround Right.

•

Center — Controls the amount of output sound from the center
speaker.

• Sub-woofer — Controls the amount of low-frequency sound
output.

To use Surround Sound mode
1

Go to Settings > Project Properties.

2

In the Project Properties dialog box, choose a format from the
Project format drop-list.

3

Click Edit.

4

In the Edit Profile Options dialog box, click the Compression tab.

5

In the Audio format drop-list, choose Dolby Digital Audio.

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6

In the Audio Settings area, choose 3/2 (L, C, R, SL, SR) from the
Audio Type drop-list box.

7

Click the Sound Mixer button

8

Click the music note symbol in the center of the Surround Sound
Mixer. Drag it to any of the six channels depending on your sound
position preference. Repeat steps 1 and 2 in using stereo mode.

9

Drag the Volume, Center and Sub-woofer sliders to adjust sound
controls of your audio
Note: You can also adjust the sound position preference of your
tracks in Video, Overlay and Voice. To do this, click your preferred
track button and repeat steps 2 to 3.

in the toolbar.

Duplicating an audio channel
Audio files sometimes separate the vocal sound from the background
audio and put them in different channels. Duplicating an audio
channel allows you to mute the other channel.

To duplicate an audio channel, click the Sound Mixer button
in
the toolbar. Click the Attribute tab and select Duplicate audio channel.
Choose which audio channel to duplicate this may be Left or Right.
In recording voice-overs using the microphone, it will be
recorded on one channel only. You can improve the audio
volume by using this feature to duplicate across channels.

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Applying audio filters
Corel VideoStudio allows you to apply filters to your audio clips in the
Music and Voice Tracks. You can also apply audio filters to video clips
that include audio.

To apply audio filters
1

In the Library, click the

to display the filters.

2

Click the Show Audio Filters button

to display only the audio

filters.
3

Drag the audio filter to the Timeline and drop it onto an audio
clip or a video clip that includes audio.
You can also apply an audio filter from the Options panel when
an audio clip is selected. In the Music & Voice tab of the
Options panel, click Audio Filter. In the Available filters list,
select the desired audio filters and click Add. An audio filter can
be customized if the Options button is enabled. Click Options
to open a dialog box where you can define the settings for the
particular audio filter.

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Painting Creator
Painting Creator is a feature of Corel VideoStudio that allows you to
record painting, drawing, or writing strokes as an animation or still
image that can be applied to your project as an overlay effect.
This section contains the following topics:
•

Working with Painter Creator

•

Switching between Painting Creator modes

•

Creating images and animations

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Working with Painter Creator
The Painting Creator window contains all the tools you need to record
and save your animation or drawing. The table below lists the controls
and features in the Painting Creator window.

Painting Creator interface basics
1

3
4

2

5

Part

Description

1 — Brush Thickness

Defines the thickness of your brush tip through
a pair of sliders and a preview box.

2 — Canvas /
Preview Window

The painting area.

3 — Brush Panel

Choose from a wide array of paint media,
brush/tool tips, and transparency.

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Part

Description

4 — Color Palette

Allows you to choose or specify color using the
Windows Color Picker or Corel Color Picker.
You can also pick color by clicking the eye
dropper.

5 — Gallery

Contains thumbnails of the animations and
stills that you have created.

Painting Creator control buttons and sliders
New / Clear Button — Launches a new
Canvas / Preview Window.
Zoom In and Zoom Out buttons —
Allows you to zoom in and zoom out
your view of the painting.
Actual Size — Reverts your canvas or
Preview Window to its actual size.
Background image button and slider —
Clicking on the Background Image
button allows you to use images as
reference for your painting and control
its transparency through the slider.
Texture Option Button — Allows you to
choose and apply textures to your brush
tips.
Eyedropper Tool — Allows you to select
a color from the color palette or
surrounding objects.
Eraser mode button — Enables you to
write or erase your painting / animation.
Undo Button — Lets you undo and redo
actions in Still and Animation modes.

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Redo button — Lets you undo and redo
actions in Still and Animation modes.
Start recording / Snapshot button —
Records your painting session or adds
your painting to the Gallery. The
Snapshot button only appears if in Still
mode.

Play / Stop button — Plays or stops the
current painting animation. Enabled only
in Animation mode.
Delete button — Deletes an animation
or image from the library.
Change duration button — Changes
the duration of the selected clip.
Preference setting button — Launches
the Preferences dialog box.
Change to Animation or Still mode
button — Allows you to switch between
Animation mode and Still mode.
OK button — Closes Painting Creator
and inserts the animations *.uvp format
and images in the *.png format in the
Corel VideoStudio Library.
Close button — Closes the Painting
Creator window.

To launch Painting Creator
•

212

Click Tools > Painting Creator.

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To import animations and images into the Library
•

In the Painting Creator window, choose the thumbnails you want
in the Gallery and click OK.
Corel VideoStudio automatically adds your animations and stills
to the Library in the currently selected folder. Animations are
saved to the *.uvp format and images are saved as *.png files.

Switching between Painting Creator modes
There are two Painting Creator modes to choose from: Animation
mode and Still mode.

To choose between Painting Creator modes
•

Click one of the following buttons:
• Animation mode
— lets you record entire painting
sessions and embed your output in the Timeline.
• Still mode

— lets you create image files using different
sets of tools just like any digital imaging program.
Note: By default, Painting Creator will launch in Animation mode.

To change a default clip duration
1

Click the Preference setting button

.

The Preferences dialog box appears.
2

In the General tab, increase or decrease the Default macro
duration.
Note: Click OK.

Creating images and animations
You can record animations or save still images in the Painting Creator
window. You can play your animations and convert them to still

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213

images. To get different types of brushstrokes, you can adjust your
brush settings. You can also use a reference image as you draw.

To record a painting animation
1

Click Start recording.

2

Using the different sets of brushes and colors, paint your still
image on the canvas or Preview Window and click Stop recording
when finished.
Note: Your painting animation will automatically be saved in the
Gallery.

To paint a still image
•

Using the different sets of brushes and colors, paint your still
image on the canvas or Preview Window and click Snapshot when
finished.
Note: Your painting will automatically be saved in the Gallery.

To play your painting animations
•

Click an animation thumbnail in the Gallery and click the Play
button

.

To convert your animation to a still image
•

In the Gallery, right-click your animation thumbnail and select
Transfer animation item to still.
Note: You can use the still image as an intro or end clip of your
animation.

To specify your brush settings
1

Click on the Settings button

2

Modify the brush properties to achieve your desired brush stroke
effect.

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Note: Options vary for each painting tool.
3

Click OK.

To use a reference image
•

Click the Background Image Option button
and the
Background Image Option dialog box appears. Set the following
options:
• Refer to the default background color — allows you to select a
solid background color for your painting or animation.
• Current timeline image — uses the video frame currently being
displayed on the Timeline.
• Customize image — allows you to open an image and use it as
the background for your painting or animation.

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Live screen capture
Record computer actions and mouse movement by using the screen
capture feature in Corel VideoStudio. This feature lets you create
videos that require visualization in a few easy steps. You can also
define the capture area for more emphasis and focus or integrate
voice-overs.
This section contains the following topics:
•

Starting a screen capture project

•

Recording your screen

Starting a screen capture project
To open the Live Screen Capture window
•

You can do one of the following options:
In the Capture workspace, click Live Screen Capture to launch
the Screen Capture toolbar. The Corel VideoStudio main

•

program window minimizes in the background and the Live

•
•

Screen Capture toolbar appears.
Click Screen Capture
from Record/Capture Option
.
Select Live Screen Capture from the programs list in the Start
menu or click the program tile on the Start screen.

The capture area frame automatically covers the entire screen by
default and appears along with the Live Screen Capture toolbar.

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217

Screen Capture toolbar basics
2

1

3

4
Part

Description

1 — Capture area
frame

Specifies the display area to capture (blue
outline with nodes). This covers the entire
screen by default.

2 — Recording
Controls

Contains the buttons that control your screen
capture.

3 — Capture area
frame dimensions

Specifies the active program to capture and the
exact dimensions of the area to capture in the
Width and Height boxes.

4 — Settings
(default view)

Lets you specify file, audio, display and
keyboard shortcut settings.

Recording your screen
Before taking the actual screen capture, make sure to configure the
settings of the video first.

To configure your video
1
218

Click Settings.
Corel VideoStudio X10

2

In File Settings, specify the following details:
• Filename — Enter a filename for your project.
• Save to — Lets you specify the location where you want to save
the video file.
• Capture to library — Enable to automatically import your
screen capture to the Library and identify the save path in the
Library.
Note: Screen captures are saved to the Samples folder in the
Library by default. Click
to add a new folder and change the
location where the file is saved.
• Format — Choose an option from the available formats in the
drop-list.
• Frame rate — Lets you specify the number of frames to be used
when recording.
Note: Using a lower frame rate is ideal for uploading videos to
the Internet as it yields a smaller file size but with less accuracy on
screen dynamics. A higher frame rate produces a larger file size
and is most useful for detailed presentations to capture actual
screen dynamics.

3

In Audio Settings > Voice, do one of the following:
to record a voice-over. Click
• Click Enable voice recording
the Sound Check button to test your voice input.
• Click Disable voice recording
recording.

to disable voice-over

4

Enable or disable System audio and adjust the volume slider to
your preference.

5

In Control Settings, the following options are available:
• Mouse click animation — Enable to include mouse clicks in the
screen capture.
• Enable F10/F11 shortcut key — Turns the keyboard shortcuts
for screen capture on and off.

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219

Note: If the screen capture shortcut keys are in conflict with the
program you want to capture, it is recommended that you disable
this feature to avoid accidental stops or pauses while recording.
6

In Monitor Settings, choose a display device.
Note: The program automatically detects the number of display
devices available on your system. Primary monitor is selected by
default.

To record your screen capture
1

Choose one of the following options:
• Full screen — lets you capture the entire screen. When you
launch the Screen Capture toolbar, this option is enabled by
default.
• Custom — lets you specify the area to capture. The capture area
dimensions are displayed accordingly. You can also specify an
application window to capture by choosing an option from the
list of active programs.

2

Click Settings to access more options.
Note: To include voice-overs and system audio, you must enable
and configure the respective settings before you start recording.

3

Click Start / Resume Recording to start the screen capture.
All activities inside the specified capture area are recorded. Screen
capture starts after the countdown.
Note: You can press F10 to stop and F11 to pause or resume the
screen capture.

4

Click Stop Recording to finish your screen capture.
The screen capture is added to the Library and to the custom
folder that you have specified. The video can then be imported
into the Corel VideoStudio Timeline and you can trim the clip or
add effects and titles.

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For more information, see “Edit media” on page 85 and “Titles
and subtitles” on page 127.
To create a high quality video, use the applicable Windows
Media Video (WMV) profile in the Share workspace. You can
also enable Same as First Video Clip to use the settings of your
screen capture recording when rendering your video.
For more information, see “Saving to video files for computer
playback” on page 264.

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FastFlick
Corel offers a fast and easy way to create your own movie. You can
quickly put together an impressive project with Corel® FastFlick. Just
pick a template, add your media clips, and save your movie.
This section contains the following topics:
•

Creating a FastFlick project

•

Selecting a template (FastFlick)

•

Adding media clips (FastFlick)

•

Editing titles (FastFlick)

•

Adding music (FastFlick)

•

Applying Pan & Zoom effects (FastFlick)

•

Setting movie duration (FastFlick)

•

Saving to video files for computer playback (FastFlick)

•

Uploading to the Web (FastFlick)

Creating a FastFlick project
When you launch FastFlick, you can immediately start a new project or
open an existing project for further editing.

To create a FastFlick project
•

From the VideoStudio window, click Tools > FastFlick.
The FastFlick window appears.

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223

To open an existing FastFlick project
•

In FastFlick, click the Menu arrow > Open Project.

Selecting a template (FastFlick)
FastFlick comes with a number of templates that feature different
themes.

To select a template
1

Click the Select Your Template tab.

2

Select a theme from the drop-list.
You can choose to display all themes or select a specific theme
from the list.

3

Click a template from the thumbnail list.

4

To preview the template, click the Play button

.

An orange box marks the selected template. The template
thumbnail is also displayed on the Your Template tab when you
open the other tabs.
If you have VideoStudio X9 or later, you can create your own
FastFlick templates.

Adding media clips (FastFlick)
You can use photos, video clips, or a combination of media clips when
creating your movie.

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To add media clips
1

Click the Add Your Media tab.

2

Click the Add Media button

.

The Add Media dialog box opens.
3

Select the media files you want to add and click Open.
You can also add media by dragging photo and video files from
a Windows Explorer folder to the FastFlick window.

Editing titles (FastFlick)
FastFlick templates have built-in title clips. You can replace the
placeholder text with your own text, change the font style and color,
and even add effects such as shadow and transparency.

To edit a title
1

On the Add Your Media tab, drag the Scrubber to the part of the
movie clip marked with a purple bar.
This activates the Edit Title button

FastFlick

.

225

2

Click the Edit Title button or double-click the title on the Preview
Window.

3

To change the font style, select a font from the Font drop-list.

4

To change the font color, click the Color button
color swatch.

and click a

You can also launch the Corel Color Picker or the Windows Color
Picker by clicking the option from the list.
5

To add a shadow, enable the Shadow check box.

6

To change the shadow color, click the Color button
below
the check box and click a color swatch or launch a Color Picker.

7

To adjust transparency, click the Transparency down arrow and
drag the slider.
You can also click inside the Transparency box and type a new
value.

8

226

To move the title, drag the text box to its new position on the
screen.
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9

To finish editing a title, click outside the text box.
Corel VideoStudio offers extended title editing capabilities. To
edit titles in Corel VideoStudio after you finish your project in
FastFlick, click the Save and Share tab and click Edit in
VideoStudio.

Adding music (FastFlick)
Most of the templates have built-in music that you can keep or replace.
You can add your own music, delete music, and change the order of
the audio files. You can also apply Audio Normalization to
automatically adjust the volume of each music clip to the same level.

To add a background music
1

On the Add Your Media tab, click the Edit Music button

2

Under Music Options, click Add Music.

.

The Add Music dialog box opens.
3

Select your audio files and click Open.

To rearrange audio clips
1

On the Add Your Media tab, click the Edit Music button.

2

Click an audio file in the Music Options list.

3

Click the Move up button
change the audio file order.

or the Move down button

to

To delete an audio file
1

On the Add Your Media tab, click the Edit Music button

2

Click an audio file title and click the Delete button

FastFlick

.

.
227

To apply Audio Normalization
1

On the Add Your Media tab, click the Edit Music button

.

2

Enable the Audio Normalization check box to adjust the volume
of each music clip to the same level.

Applying Pan & Zoom effects (FastFlick)
Make your movie or slideshow more interesting by adding pan and
zoom effects to your photos. FastFlick does the work for you by
applying the effect to all the photos in your project.

To apply Pan & Zoom effects to photos
1

On the Add Your Media tab, click the Options button

.

2

Under Photo Pan & Zoom Options, enable the Smart Pan &
Zoom check box.

Setting movie duration (FastFlick)
You can determine the relationship between the duration of your
project and the music.

To set movie duration
1

On the Add Your Media tab, click the Options button

.

2

Under Movie Duration, choose one of the following options:
• Fit music to movie duration — automatically adjusts the music
clip to play until the movie ends.
• Fit movie to music duration — automatically adjusts the movie
clip to play until the music track ends.

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Saving to video files for computer playback (FastFlick)
FastFlick lets you save your movie project to video file formats that you
can playback on computers.

To create a video file for computer playback
1

On the Save and Share tab, click the Computer button

.

2

Click one of the following buttons to view and choose the profile
for your video:
• AVI
• MPEG-2
• AVC/H.264
• MPEG-4
• WMV

3

In the Profile drop-list, choose an option.

4

In the File name box, type a file name.

5

In the File location box, specify the location where you want to
save the file.

6

Click Save Movie.

Uploading to the Web (FastFlick)
Share your movie online by uploading your videos to YouTube,
Facebook and Flickr, or Vimeo. You can access your accounts from
within FastFlick. If you don’t have an existing account, you will be
prompted to create an account.
The first time you log in from FastFlick, you are asked to authorize the
connection between your online account and FastFlick. This
authorization allows for the exchange of limited information related to
the successful upload of your video.

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229

As with any video upload, the online site usually requires time to post
the video after it has been uploaded.
Please make sure to abide by the terms of use regarding
copyright ownership of video and music as set by YouTube,
Facebook, Flickr, and Vimeo.

To upload your video to YouTube, Facebook, Flickr, or
Vimeo
1

On the Save and Share tab, click the Upload to Web button

2

Click one of the following buttons:

.

• YouTube
• Facebook
• Flickr
• Vimeo
If you need to sign in, the Log In button appears. Click the button
to sign in. If it is the first time you are signing in, you will be asked
to authorize the connection between Corel VideoStudio and your
online account.
3

Fill in the necessary information such as your video title,
description, privacy settings and additional tags.

4

In the Quality drop-list, select your preferred video quality.

5

In the File name box, type a file name.

6

In the File location box, specify the location where you want to
save a copy of file.

7

Click Upload Your Movie.

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Editing your movie in VideoStudio (FastFlick)
FastFlick is designed to help you complete a movie in three easy steps.
However, you always have the option to edit your project further in
VideoStudio.

To edit a movie in VideoStudio
•

On the Save and Share tab, click Edit in VideoStudio.
The project files are automatically placed on the Timeline.
After your FastFlick project is imported into VideoStudio, you
can continue editing your movie just like any VideoStudio
project.
For more information, see “Timeline” on page 75.

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Making FastFlick templates
You can create FastFlick templates in VideoStudio X10. Unlike Instant
Project templates, which are essentially previously saved static
projects, FastFlick templates are designed to automatically expand or
contract according to the number of photos and videos that a user
drops into the template. This means a system of rules is required to
control what to change, what to keep, and what to repeat. FastFlick
templates are very easy to use, but creating them requires knowledge
and planning.
This section contains the following topics:
•

Terminology for FastFlick templates

•

Rules for creating FastFlick templates

•

Creating FastFlick templates

Terminology for FastFlick templates
The following terminology is used when creating and describing
FastFlick templates.
•

Segment — each image or video clip added to the main track
creates a segment (this includes images or videos from the
Graphic Library, such as backgrounds or objects). You can
enhance your segment by adding elements such as overlays,
titles, and transitions. You can also apply effects to elements in
your segment. It’s important to think of a segment as an
independent block. This is achieved by ensuring that elements
within the segment do not extend beyond the duration of the

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233

segment’s image or video in the main track (the Music track is the
only exception).
•

Element — an element can be a transition, title, object, or any
piece of media. It is a way of describing the individual pieces used
to build a template segment.

•

Attributes — the properties that you assign to template elements
that determine their behavior.

•

Placeholder — an attribute that is assigned to temporary media
that will be swapped out for user media. Placeholders are
repeatable by default (to accommodate the unspecified number
of media that a user can add to a template).
Optional is an attribute you can assign to a placeholder if you feel
that the element is not required if there is not enough user
content. For example, you can apply Optional to a placeholder in
the main video track if the segment can be dropped when user
content runs out (rather than repeat user content to complete the
sequence).

•

234

Static — an attribute assigned to a template element that you
want to keep in the current position. When the media in the main
video track is marked as static, the segment won’t repeat in the
sequence—it will display only in the current position (for example,
in a beginning or end segment).

Corel VideoStudio X10

Each image or video clip added to the main video track creates
a segment (indicated by the orange boxes). Each segment can
have multiple elements (indicated by the red ovals).

Making FastFlick templates

235

The FastFlick Template Designer dialog box lets you assign
attributes to the elements in your template. To open the
dialog box, right-click a template element in the Timeline and
choose FastFlick Template Designer.

Rules for creating FastFlick templates
For FastFlick templates to work correctly, you must follow some rules.
Because you create the templates in the same workspace that you use
for all projects, it’s easy to break the rules without realizing it. It’s best
to review the rules before you save your template and always test your
saved template in FastFlick before you share it.

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Rules
1

Segments: Ensure that the elements in a segment do not cross
between segments.

2

Placeholders: You must have at least one placeholder in your
template.

3

Audio: Use only Music Track #1 for template audio. Audio files are
the only elements that can extend beyond a single segment (for
example, you can have one song that extends the entire length of
your template project).

4

Titles: Use only Title Track #1 for titles

5

Transitions: Use transitions only at the end of segments that are
not the first or last segment in your template. Although
technically transitions bridge segments, think of a transition as
belonging to the media that comes before it.

6

Group: If you want user media to appear in more than one
position, you must assign a matching Group number to the
placeholders. For example, the same piece of user media can be
used in an intro overlay and in the main part of a slideshow if you
assign the same Group number attribute to the corresponding
placeholders.

The rules above are basic rules that will get you started—there are
some exceptions. For inspiration and to gain a better understanding
of what different attribute settings can do, open existing FastFlick
templates in VideoStudio and review the attribute settings for the
elements.

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237

Segment - no element
extends beyond video
track media except Music.

Transitions
between middle
segments only.

Attributes (overlay elements):
Placeholder, Group (number
assigned to each placeholder to
match one of the middle
segment placeholders)

Attributes (middle
segments): Placeholder,
Optional, Group (number
assigned to each
placeholder to match one of
the overlay placeholders in
the first segment

Attribute: Static (element
doesn’t change and the
segment won’t repeat stays put)

The project above has five segments. Blue areas indicate the
first and last segment and orange areas indicate the three
middle segments. The attributes chosen for this project
ensure that the blue areas appear only once (beginning
segment and end segment) and the orange segments will
repeat in sequence until all the user media is accommodated.
User media that appears in the small intro overlays will also
appear as part of the main slideshow.

Creating FastFlick templates
You can approach FastFlick template creation in different ways: you
can modify an existing FastFlick template, convert an existing project
to a template, use Instant Project components, or build a template
from scratch. For your first project, it is recommended that you build
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a template from scratch because it is a good way to learn the template
rules. Reviewing existing FastFlick templates is a good way to get
inspiration.
In general, FastFlick templates will have a beginning, a middle, and an
end. Although technically you can have only one segment in your
template, it takes several segments to define a look and feel for a
template.
Here are some things to think about when creating your template:
•

What are the anchor elements (things that stay the same)? For
example, do you have a beginning segment and end segment? If
so, what elements within those segments stay the same? Will
these segments include static placeholders (user content that
does not repeat)?

•

How many segments do you want to create? Keep in mind that
segments with placeholders repeat in sequence until all the user
media is accommodated (unless marked as Static)

•

Which segments are optional (can be dropped when the user
content is done)?

To create a template
1

In the VideoStudio Edit workspace, build your template, following
the FastFlick template rules.
Ensure that the elements for each segment do not overlap (with
the exception of audio clips on the Music 1 track).

2

Right-click an element and choose FastFlick Template Designer.

3

In the FastFlick Template Designer dialog box, choose the
attributes that you want to apply to the element.

4

Repeat steps 3-4 for each element.

5

Click File > Save, and type a file name.

6

Click File > Export as Template > FastFlick Template.

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239

Verify the Template path and Template folder name.
If you want the folder name to be different from your file name,
type a new name in the Template folder name box.
7

In the Category list, choose a group for your template.

8

Click OK.
If you include video clip placeholders in your template, the
length of the user video clip will be constrained to the length of
the corresponding placeholder clip if an effect filter is applied
to the placeholder clip.

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Stop motion animation
Using captured images from DV/HDV camcorders, webcams or
DSLRs, or imported photos, you can create stop motion animations
directly in Corel VideoStudio and add them to your video projects.
This section contains the following topics:
•

Creating a Stop Motion project

•

Capturing stop motion images in Corel VideoStudio

•

Using the DSLR Enlarged Mode

Creating a Stop Motion project
For best results, use a tripod when you shoot photos and videos that
you want to use in your stop motion animation project.

To open the Stop Motion window
•

In the Capture workspace, click Stop Motion to launch the Stop
Motion window.
Note: You can also launch the Stop Motion window when you
click Stop Motion

from Record/Capture Option

.

To create a new stop motion animation project
1

Click Create to create a new stop motion project.
Note: If you have an existing project open, you will be prompted
to save your work before proceeding.

2

In Project Name, enter a name for your stop motion project.

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241

3

In Capture Folder, specify or browse for the destination folder
where you want your clips to be stored.

4

Select where you want your stop motion project to be stored by
choosing an existing Library folder from the drop-list in Save to
Library.
Note: You can also create a new Library folder when you click
Add a new folder.

To open an existing stop motion animation project
1

Click Open and browse for the stop motion animation project that
you want to work on.
Note: Stop motion animation projects created in
Corel VideoStudio are in Ulead Image Sequence (*.uisx) format.

2

Click Open to activate the project.

To import images into a stop motion animation project
1

Click Import and browse for the photos that you want to include
in your stop motion animation projects.

2

Click Open.

Note: If photos do not appear in the folder, click Browse.
Your photos are automatically included in the stop motion
animation project.
A series of photos shot with your DSLR on auto/continuous
mode is a good example for stop motion animation projects.

To play your stop motion animation project
•

Click Play.

To save your stop motion animation project
•
242

Click Save. Your project is automatically saved in the Capture and
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Library folders that you specified.

To exit Stop Motion
•

Click Exit to go back to your video project.

Capturing stop motion images in Corel VideoStudio
To capture images
1

Connect the webcam, DV/HDV camcorder or DSLR to your
computer.

2

A message box appears to confirm that you want to use the
device. Click OK.

3

If more than one device is connected, select your preferred
capture device from the drop-list.

4

Modify any of the Stop motion settings.

5

Click Capture image to capture images manually.

Stop motion settings tab
•

Image Duration — Lets you choose the exposure time for each
image. A higher frame rate results in a shorter exposure time for
each image.

•

Capture Resolution — Lets you adjust the screen capture quality.
Options vary according to the settings on your capture device.

•

Auto Capture — You can click Enable auto capture to configure
the program to capture automatically using preset intervals. Click
to adjust the Capture Frequency and
the Set Time button
Total Capture Duration settings.

•

Onion Skin — Lets you move the slider from left to right to
control the opacity of the new captured image and the previously
captured frame. Captured frames automatically appear in the
Stop Motion timeline.

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To capture images using a webcam or DV/HDV camcorder
1

If you are using a DV/HDV camcorder, switch it to Play/Edit mode
and make sure that your DV/HDV camcorder is switched to DV/
HDV mode.

2

In Record mode, move your subject between each capture to
show movement in the images.

3

If you are using footage from a DV/HDV camcorder, you can make
screen captures during video playback.

To capture images using a DSLR
1

When a supported DSLR is connected, the Auto Focus button
will be enabled automatically. You can choose to keep this
.
setting or click the Manual Focus button
Note: If the DSLR does not support Auto Focus, the Manual
Focus button will be enabled automatically and the Auto Focus
button will be grayed out.

2

You can enable the live view focus display on supported DSLRs by
clicking the Show focus button

.

3

Modify any of the following DSLR settings: ISO, White Balance, Ev,
Metering Mode and Image Quality. Corel VideoStudio uses the
DSLR settings for Mode, Aperture and Shutter Speed.

4

You can switch to the Enlarged mode by clicking the Enlarge
button

Using the DSLR Enlarged Mode
Corel VideoStudio mimics the camera viewfinder and gives you quick
access to DSLR features and settings.

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1

15

2

14

3

13

4
5

12

6
7
8

9

10

11

Part

Description

1 — Mode

Displays information on the selected
camera mode.

2 — Image quality

Lets you set the image size and quality.

3 — Metering mode

Lets you set the metering mode by
selecting from your camera’s preset
options.

4 — White balance

Lets you set the white balance by selecting
from your camera’s preset options.

5 — Focus indicator

Displays information on the selected focus
setting.

6 — Show focus

Displays live view focus guides on the
screen.

7 — Aperture

Displays the aperture settings of the
camera. This will be disabled when the
DSLR is in P or Tv mode.

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245

Part

Description

8 — Shutter speed

Displays the shutter speed settings of the
camera. This will be disabled when the
DSLR is in P or Av mode.

9 — ISO

Lets you adjust the ISO setting by selecting
from your camera’s preset options.

10 — Live view focus
guides

Lets you adjust the focus area by clicking
on the arrows or dragging the focus area
box.

11 — Ev

Lets you choose the exposure value
compensation setting.

12 — Onion skin

Lets you control the opacity of the new
captured image and the previously
captured frame by moving the slider.

13 — Auto capture

Enables the auto capture feature.

14 — Capture resolution

Lets you set the image resolution. You can
choose from the preset options or use the
settings on your DSLR.

15 — Image duration

Lets you set the exposure time for each
image.

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Multi-Camera Editing
The Multi-Camera Editor lets you create professional-looking video
compilations from footage of events that have been captured on
different cameras, from different angles.
The easy multi-view workspace lets you synchronize the clips and edit
on the fly, as the video clips play back simultaneously—up to *six
cameras. With a simple click, you can switch from one video clip to
another in the same way a broadcast studio switches from one camera
to another to capture a different angle or element of a scene.
Footage can be captured on a wide range of video recording devices,
such as action cameras, drone cameras, DSLRs, or smartphones. You
can also include audio captured independently on a microphone.
*Number of cameras depends on the version of the software you have.

This section contains the following topics:
•

The Multi-Camera Editor workspace

•

Basic steps in multi-camera editing

•

Importing video and audio clips into the Multi-Camera Editor

•

Synchronizing video and audio clips in multi-camera projects

•

Choosing an audio source for your multi-camera project

•

Editing multiple clips to create a multi-camera compilation

•

Adding picture-in-picture (PIP) in the Multi-Camera Editor

•

Managing multi-camera source files

•

Saving and exporting your multi-camera project

•

Using Smart Proxy with the Multi-Camera Editor

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247

The Multi-Camera Editor workspace
The image below identifies the main features of the Multi-Camera
Editor.
Multi-view pane

Main Audio
Source Sync Type
Multi-Camera and PIP tracks

Main preview pane

Timeline

Scrubber

Toolbar and playback controls

Toolbar, playback, and other controls
The controls found in the workspace are listed below.
The main toolbar includes the following controls:
Camera Number — Lets you set the multi-view pane to show
four or six cameras, depending on your version of the software.
Source Sync Type — Lets you synchronize the
clips. For more information, see “Synchronizing video and audio clips
in multi-camera projects” on page 252.
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Main Audio — Lets you select a preferred audio
source. For more information, see “Choosing an audio source for your
multi-camera project” on page 254.
Split Clip — Lets you split a clip into segments. For more
information, see “To split a clip in the Multi-Camera Editor” on
page 258.
Set/Remove Marker — Lets you add markers on the Camera
tracks for editing purposes, such as audio syncing.
Transition and Duration — Lets you apply a transition
between clips in the Multi-Camera track and set the duration for the
transition. For more information, see “To add a transition between
multi-camera segments” on page 257.
The main preview pane includes the following controls:
Rotate Left and Rotate Right — Let you rotate clips in the
Camera tracks before you add them to your Multi-Camera track or
your PIP track. Note: Only unlocked tracks can be rotated.
Playback bar with Home, Previous Frame, Play,
Next Frame, and End buttons.
Loop — Lets you play the selected track continuously by looping
back to the start when it reaches the end.
Set Volume — Lets you adjust the audio volume for playback.
Timecode control — Lets you view and set the time/
frame that appears in the main preview pane and where the scrubber
is set in the timeline. Click the arrows or a click number value to set a
time/frame.
The timeline includes the following controls:
Source Manager — Lets you add and remove clips. For more
information, see “Managing multi-camera source files” on page 259.
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249

Show/Hide Audio Waveform View — Lets you view the audio
waves for Camera and Audio tracks.
Lock/Unlock — Appears on individual tracks. Locking tracks
is recommended after you synchronize them.
Include/Exclude from Synchronization — Lets you determine
which tracks are included in the synchronization process.
Mute/Unmute — Lets you turn the audio off (mute) or on
(unmute) for the selected audio track.
Zoom to Timeline — Located in the lower left corner of the
timeline, this control lets you expand or compress your project so you
can view the whole project in the timeline.
Zoom Level slider — Drag the slider or click
the Zoom in (plus sign) or Zoom out (minus sign) to change the zoom
level for your project. This is particularly helpful when editing
individual segments in the Multi-Camera track.
The following general controls appear in the upper-left corner of the
application window:
Settings — Lets you access the Proxy Manager and Save As. For
more information, see “Using Smart Proxy with the Multi-Camera
Editor” on page 261 and “To save your multi-camera project” on
page 260.
Undo and Redo — Lets you undo or redo most actions in the
Multi-Camera Editor.

Basic steps in multi-camera editing
The following steps provide a basic overview of the multi-camera
editing process.

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1

Import the video and audio clips that you want to use into the
VideoStudio Library. Typically these are multiple clips that capture
the same event, at the same time.

2

Choose the clips in the Library and import them into the MultiCamera Editor.

3

Synchronize the clips across the timeline. You can do this
automatically if all the clips have audio, but there are a range of
methods you can use for synchronization.

4

Choose the audio you want to keep (if you are using the original
audio). You can choose a separate audio track as well.

5

Start building your multi-camera compilation. You can play all the
clips simultaneously, and in the multi-view pane, click the
“Camera” that you want to show. You can switch clips as many
times as you like. The selected footage displays in the main
preview pane. You can then review your project in the MultiCamera track and fine-tune it.

6

Save and exit the Multi-Camera Editor to return to VideoStudio
and output the project.
Important! It’s recommended that you finish your multi-camera
editing before you exit the Multi-Camera Editor. Changes that you
make to your project in another editor might not be supported if
you re-open the project in the Multi-Camera Editor. This means
that some changes will be reverted.

Importing video and audio clips into the MultiCamera Editor
The first step in creating a multi-camera project is to import your clips
into the Multi-Camera Editor. In most cases, this will be a selection of
clips from the same event that have been imported to the VideoStudio
Library.

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251

You can work with up to six video clips at one time and include up to
two independent audio clips.

To import video clips into the Multi-Camera Editor
1

In the VideoStudio Library, select all the clips you want to use.

2

Do one of the following:
• On the timeline toolbar, click the Multi-Camera Editor
button

.

• Right-click a selected clip and choose Multi-Camera Editor.

Synchronizing video and audio clips in multi-camera
projects
You can synchronize your video and audio clips so that they are all
aligned to the same moment in time. The easiest way to do this is to
let the Multi-Camera Editor analyze the audio for each of the clips and
sync the clips automatically. If your recordings are planned, you can
use a special audio signal, such as clapping your hands (similar
function to using a clapper board in professional shoots). Some events
have natural audio cues that help the sync process, such as music
performances or sporting events with a start signal.
You can also synchronize the clips by using markers, shooting time, or
you can adjust them manually by dragging the clips in the timeline to
the timecode you want. For example, you could use a common visual
element, such as a flash to sync videos manually. These methods are
helpful if your video footage doesn’t include audio or the audio
waveforms within the clips are difficult to sync, or you simply prefer to
align the clips manually.
In some cases you might need to use a combination of the
synchronization options, depending on your source footage.

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To synchronize video and audio clips in the Multi-Camera
Editor
1

After importing your clips to the Multi-Camera Editor, choose
one of the following options from the Source Sync Type drop-list
on the toolbar:
• Audio — Click the Sync button

next to the drop-list to

synchronize the clips in the timeline. Note: Your video clips must
include audio to use this option.
• Marker — Select a clip in the timeline, play the clip or scrub to
the position you want by using a visual cue, and click the Set/
Remove Marker button

on the toolbar to add a marker.

After a marker has been added to each clip, click the Sync
button

on the toolbar to align the clips according to the

markers.
• Shooting Date/Time — Click the Sync button

to

synchronize the clips according the shooting date and time as
indicated by the metadata recorded by the camera. Note: The
clocks must be in sync on the cameras to get accurate results.
• Manual — In the timeline, drag each clip to the position you
want by using a visual cue.
Note: If there are clips that you want to exclude from the
synchronization process, click the Exclude from
on the corresponding track. Click
Synchronization button
the button again (Enable for Synchronization
) to include
the track.
Tip: After you synchronize your clips, you can use the Lock
buttons
on the individual tracks to ensure that the tracks
stay synchronized during the editing process.
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253

Choosing an audio source for your multi-camera
project
After you import and synchronize your clips in the Multi-Camera
Editor, you can make some decisions about the audio for your project.
For example, if you have four video clips, and they all include audio, it
is recommended that you listen to each clip individually, and choose
the one that has the best sound quality. You can also choose to use a
separate audio clip.
Other options let you use the audio from all clips, none of the clips, or
switch audio (Auto) when you switch cameras, a choice you might
make to take advantage of the audio captured with sport or other
action footage.
By default, the audio for Camera 1 is selected.

To choose an audio source for your multi-camera project
1

With your clips displaying in the Multi-Camera Editor timeline, on
the toolbar, click the Main Audio box and choose a Camera or
Audio clip. Click Play

to listen the quality of the audio for

each clip.
2

Choose the Camera or Audio clip that you want to use for your
project. The audio from all other tracks will be muted.
Other options include:
• Auto — Switches the audio to match the clip that you are
playing
• None — No audio is included in the multi-camera project. You
can add your audio in VideoStudio, after you leave the MultiCamera Editor.
• All Cameras — Plays audio from all clips, simultaneously

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Tip: If you plan to edit the audio after you exit the MultiCamera Editor, please note that the setting you choose in Main
Audio determines what tracks will be available as audio tracks
in VideoStudio.

Editing multiple clips to create a multi-camera
compilation
After you import and synchronize your clips in the Multi-Camera
Editor, and choose your audio settings, you can start editing your clips
to create a multi-camera compilation. The multi-view pane in the
Multi-Camera Editor helps make this task fun and easy. Much like a DJ
switches and blends tracks to create a new music compilation, the
Multi-Camera Editor lets you visually switch between video tracks and
blend them together with transitions.
If you notice that playback is slow or lacks smoothness, you can check
the Smart Proxy settings. For more information, see “Using Smart
Proxy with the Multi-Camera Editor” on page 261.
After you build your basic compilation using the multi-view pane and
the main preview pane, you can fine-tune your project in the MultiCamera track and take advantage of editing features, such as
transitions and a clip splitting tool. Note that some types of edits, such
as rotating a clip, must be done in the individual Camera tracks before
you add the clips to your compilation in the Multi-Camera track.

To create a multi-camera compilation
1

With your clips in the Multi-Camera Editor timeline, click the Play
button

below the main preview pane.

Footage from all cameras can be viewed simultaneously in the
multi-view pane.

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255

2

To start building your project, as the videos play in the multi-view
pane, click the preview for the camera that you want to show.
The footage from the selected camera displays in the main
preview pane.

The multi-view pane appears to the left of the main preview
pane. Footage from all cameras can be viewed simultaneously
in the multi-view pane.

3

To switch cameras, click a different camera preview in the multiview pane. You can switch cameras as many times as you like. You
can review your project in the Multi-Camera track.

The Multi-Camera track in the timeline displays the camera
segments in your compilation.

If you want to adjust the zoom level for the Multi-Camera track,
drag the zoom level slider

in the lower left

corner of the timeline.
4

256

After you have completed a first pass using the multi-view pane,
you can refine the timing for a switch in the Multi-Camera track
by playing your project or scrubbing to the position that you want
to edit, clicking a camera segment and dragging the edge until
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the frame where you want the switch to occur appears in the main
preview pane.

To switch a segment in the Multi-Camera track to a different
Camera, right-click the segment and choose a different Camera
from the context menu or click the camera preview in the multiview pane.

To add a transition between multi-camera segments
1

In the Multi-Camera track, click a segment.

2

On the toolbar, click the Transition button

. The button has a

yellow outline when active and a transition icon (“AB”) appears in
the timeline
If the button is grayed out, gently drag the edge of a segment by
a small amount to reactivate the button.
A Crossfade transition is applied by default.
3

On the toolbar, type a time in the Duration box for the transition.
Tip: You can add black or blank segments to your project.
You can change a segment that is already in the MultiCamera track to a black or a blank by right-clicking the
segment and choosing Black or Blank. You can apply a
transition between a video segment and a Black segment.
To add a black or blank segment while playing your
project, instead of clicking a camera preview in the multi-view
pane, click the Black (B) or Blank (0) swatch to the right of the
camera previews.

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257

To split a clip in the Multi-Camera Editor
1

In the timeline, select a clip in the Multi-Camera or PIP track and
click Play or drag the scrubber to the position where you want to
make the cut.

2

Click the Split Clip button.
Note: Splitting a clip is useful when you want to replace part of
a segment with a different camera, essentially adding another
switch.

Adding picture-in-picture (PIP) in the Multi-Camera
Editor
You can add a picture-in-picture (PIP) effect to your multi-camera
project. PIP lets you play a video in one area of the screen while the
main video plays in the background.

The image above illustrates the concept of picture-in-picture
(PIP).

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To add a picture-in-picture (PIP) effect to your multicamera project
1

After you create your multi-camera compilation in the MultiCamera track, click the Play button

or scrub to the position in

the Multi-Camera track where you want to add a PIP effect.
2

In the timeline, click the circle on the PIP track to activate the
track.
The circle will have a red fill when active

3

.

In the multi-view pane, click the preview for the Camera you want
to use.
The segment is added to the PIP track.

4

To set the end point for the segment, in the PIP track, click the
end of the segment and drag it to the position you want in the
timeline.

5

To choose a corner for the PIP, click the Change PIP Position
button

on the PIP track and choose the position you want.

The PIP position can be seen in the main preview pane.

Managing multi-camera source files
You can use the Source Manager to add and remove video and audio
clips from tracks in your multi-camera project. You can also view
information about the clips, such as the duration of the clip, clip
location, and you can lock or unlock tracks.

To add, remove or manage clips with the Source Manager
1

In the upper left corner of the timeline, click the Source Manager
button

2

.

In the Source Manager dialog box, do any of the following:

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259

• Click the Lock/Unlock button for a track to unlock a track for
editing or to lock a track to prevent editing.
• To add a clip to a track, select a track, click the Add Clips button
, navigate to the clip you want to add, and click Open. The
clip appears in the numbered list for the track.
• To delete clips from a track, select a track, in the list of clips for
that track, mark the check box next to the clips that you want to
delete, and click the Delete button

.

Saving and exporting your multi-camera project
When you finish building your multi-camera project, you can save it so
that it can be edited, exported, and shared from VideoStudio.
Important! It’s recommended that you finish your multi-camera
editing before you exit the Multi-Camera Editor. Changes that you
make to your project in VideoStudio might not be supported if you
re-open the project in the Multi-Camera Editor. This means that
some changes will be reverted.

To save your multi-camera project
•

Click the OK button at the bottom of the window to save your
project to the current name (as indicated in the upper-right corner
of the window). This also closes the Multi-Camera Editor.
If you want to rename your project, before you exit, click the
Settings button

, choose Save As, and type a name in the

Project name box.
Your multi-camera project appears in the VideoStudio Library.
To open your multi-camera project (.vsp) in VideoStudio, in the
Edit workspace, drag your multi-camera project from the Library
to the Timeline. By default, the project appears as a composite
clip. To expand the clip to work with individual tracks, hold the

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Shift key when you drag the project from the Library and drop it
in the Timeline.

Using Smart Proxy with the Multi-Camera Editor
The main purpose of Smart Proxy is to provide a more fluid editing
and previewing experience when working with large, high resolution
video files.
Smart Proxy creates lower resolution working copies of larger source
files. These smaller files are called “proxy” files. Using proxy files
speeds up editing of high resolution projects (for example, projects
that have HDV and AVCHD source files).
Smart Proxy can be set and adjusted in the VideoStudio workspaces or
in the Multi-Camera Editor. For more information, see “Using Smart
Proxy for a faster, smoother editing experience” on page 57.

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Save and share
With your movie project finished, it’s time to save and share it. When
you save your project, all the files are combined to create a single
video file in a process called rendering.
You can save your movie as a video file that can be played on a
computer or a mobile device, burn your project to a disc complete
with menus, or upload your movie directly to a YouTube, Facebook,
Flickr, or Vimeo account.
This section contains the following topics:
•

Choosing a sharing option

•

Saving to video files for computer playback

•

Saving to video files for mobile devices

•

Saving HTML5 video files

•

Uploading to the Web

•

Creating 3D video files

•

Creating video files from part of a project (trimmed)

•

Creating sound files

•

Working with custom profiles in the Share workspace

Choosing a sharing option
Corel VideoStudio provides the following sharing categories:
• Computer — Save to a file format that lets you play your movie
on computers. You can also use this option to save the video
soundtrack to an audio file. For more information, see “Saving to

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video files for computer playback” on page 264 and “Creating
sound files” on page 274.
• Device — Save to a file format that lets you play your movie on
mobile devices, game consoles, or cameras. For more information,
see “Saving to video files for mobile devices” on page 266.
• HTML5 — If you chose File > New HTML5 project at the start of
your project or opened an HTML5 project, this output option
becomes available in the Share workspace. This format is
compatible with a broad range of browsers, including Safari. For
more information, see “Saving HTML5 video files” on page 268.
• Web — Upload your movie directly to YouTube, Facebook, Flickr,
or Vimeo. Your movie is saved in an optimal format for the site
you choose. For more information, see “Uploading to the Web”
on page 270.
• Disc — Save and burn your movie to a disc or SD card. For more
information, see “Burn discs” on page 277.
• 3D Movie — Save your movie to a 3D playback format. For more
information, see“Creating 3D video files” on page 272.
• VideoStudio Project — If you chose File > New HTML5 project
at the start of your project, you can save a copy in the native
Corel VideoStudio format (*.vsp). For more information, see “To
save an HTML5 project as a Corel VideoStudio Pro project (VSP)”
on page 270.

Saving to video files for computer playback
Corel VideoStudio lets you save your movie project to video file
formats that you can playback on computers.
Before rendering your entire project into a movie file, make
sure you first save it as a Corel VideoStudio project file (*.vsp)
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by clicking File > Save or Save As. This lets you return to your
project at any time and make edits.

To create a video file for computer playback
1

In the Share workspace, click the Computer button

.

2

Click one of the following buttons to view and choose the profile
for your video:
• AVI
• MPEG-2
• AVC/H.264
• MPEG-4
• WMV
• MOV
• Audio
• Custom
If you want to use the Project Settings for the video file, enable
the Same as Project Settings check box located above the
buttons.

3

In the Profile or Format drop-list, choose an option.
If you want to create a custom profile, click the Create Custom
Profile button
. For more information, see “Working with
custom profiles in the Share workspace” on page 275.

4

In the File name box, type a file name.

5

In the File location box, specify the location where you want to
save the file.

6

Set any of the following options:
• Create Preview Range Only — renders only the section of video
that is selected between the Trim Markers in the Preview panel.

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• Enable Smart Render — analyzes a video for any previously
rendered sections and renders only the new or revised sections.
This can reduce rendering time significantly.
7

Click Start.
Press the [Esc] key to cancel the rendering process.
A progress bar appears when you render a video. You can use
the buttons on the progress bar to do the following:

• Click the Pause/Play button
on the
progress bar to pause and resume the
rendering process.
• Click the playback button
to enable the
preview while rendering or stop the
preview to reduce rendering time.

The rendering progress bar

Saving to video files for mobile devices
You can save your movie project to file formats that you can playback
on a variety of mobile devices, such as smartphones, tablets, and game
consoles. Corel VideoStudio includes a range of profiles that optimize
your video for specific devices.

To create a video file for a portable device or camcorder
1

In the Share workspace, click the Device button

.

2

Click one of the following buttons to view and choose the profile
for your video:
• DV — Convert the project to a DV-compatible video file that
can be written back to a DV camcorder. Connect your

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camcorder to the computer, turn your camcorder on, and set it
to Play/Edit mode. See your camcorder's manual for specific
instructions.
• HDV — Convert the project to an HDV-compatible video file
that can be written back to an HDV camcorder. Connect your
camcorder to the computer, turn your camcorder on, and set it
to Play/Edit mode. See your camcorder's manual for specific
instructions.
• Mobile Device — Creates a high-definition MPEG-4 AVC file
that is compatible with most tablets and smartphones, including
iPad, iPhone, and Android devices.
• Game Console — Create MPEG-4 AVC video files that are
compatible with PSP devices.
3

In the Profile drop-list, choose an option.

4

In the File name box, type a file name.

5

In the File location box, specify the location where you want to
save the file.

6

Set any of the following options:
• Create Preview Range Only — renders only the section of video
that is selected between the Trim Markers in the Preview panel.
• Enable Smart Render — analyzes a video for any previously
rendered sections and renders only the new or revised sections.
This can reduce rendering time significantly.

7

Click Start.
Press the [Esc] key to cancel the rendering process.
You can also write back to a DV camcorder in the Edit
workspace by right-clicking a video clip in the Library and
choosing DV Recording.

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Saving HTML5 video files
If you chose File > New HTML5 project at the start of your project, the
HTML5 Files output option displays in the Share workspace.
HTML5 projects can include hyperlinks and chapters. This video format
is compatible with browsers that support HTML5 technology,
including most of the latest browsers and Safari, which is used on
iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch devices.
You can save your HTML5 video projects directly to cloud-based
storage services, such as Dropbox and Google Drive. For more
information about sharing from these cloud-based services, refer to
the Dropbox or Google Drive Help.
For more information about starting an HTML5 project, see “Creating
new projects” on page 11.
Saving an HTML5 project as an editable Corel VideoStudio project
If you might need to edit the project later and output it to formats
other than HTML5, you can save a copy of the project to the native
Corel VideoStudio Pro format (*.vsp).

To create an HTML5 video folder
1

In the Share workspace, click the HTML5 Files button

2

Modify any of the following settings:

.

• WebM — In the Video format area, mark the WebM format
check box if you want to use the WebM format.
(Recommended)
• Dimensions — Choose the screen resolution and aspect ratio
from the drop-list.
• Flatten audio and background video — In the Dimensions area,
mark this check box if you are not sure if your browser supports
more than a single video or audio track. (Recommended)
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3

In the Project folder name box, type a name.

4

In the File location box, specify the location where you want to
save the folder.
If you want to save it to a cloud-based storage service, browse for
the local folder of your preferred service.

5

Set any of the following options:
• Create Preview Range Only — renders only the section of video
that is selected between the Trim Markers in the Preview panel.
• Enable Smart Render — analyzes a video for any previously
rendered sections and renders only the new or revised sections.
This can reduce rendering time significantly, but is not available
for WebM output.

6

Click Start.
You can view the video from your output folder by opening
Index.html in your browser.
Press the [Esc] key to cancel the rendering process.
A progress bar appears when you render a video. You can use
the buttons on the progress bar to do the following:

• Click the Pause/Play button
on the
progress bar to pause and resume the
rendering process.
• Click the playback button
to enable the
preview while rendering or stop the
preview to reduce rendering time.

The rendering progress bar

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To save an HTML5 project as a Corel VideoStudio Pro
project (VSP)
1

In the Share workspace, click the VideoStudio Project button

2

In the Subject box, type your subject information.

3

In the Description box, type a project description.

4

From the File format drop-list, choose a VSP version.

5

In the File name box, type a file name.

6

In the File location box, specify the location where you want to
save the project.

7

Click Start.

.

Uploading to the Web
Share your video projects online by uploading your videos to YouTube
(in 2D and 3D formats), Facebook, Flickr, and Vimeo. You can access
your accounts from within Corel VideoStudio. If you don’t have an
existing account, you will be prompted to create an account.
The first time you log in from Corel VideoStudio, you are asked to
authorize the connection between your online account and
Corel VideoStudio. This authorization allows for the exchange of
limited information related to the successful upload of your video.
As with any video upload, the online site usually requires time to post
the video after it has been uploaded.
Please make sure to abide by the terms of use regarding
copyright ownership of video and music as set by YouTube,
Facebook, Flickr, and Vimeo.

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To upload your video to YouTube, Facebook, Flickr, or
Vimeo
1

In the Share workspace, click the Web button

2

Click one of the following buttons:

.

• YouTube
• Facebook
• Flickr
• Vimeo
If you need to sign in, the Log In button appears. Click the button
to sign in. If it is the first time you are signing in, you will be asked
to authorize the connection between Corel VideoStudio and your
online account.
3

Fill in the necessary information such as your video title,
description, privacy settings and additional tags.
If you want to upload a 3D video to YouTube, enable the Save as
3D video check box under the Privacy box.

4

Enable one of the following options:
• Upload project — you can accept the default settings, or
choose a profile from the drop-list. Type a name in the File
name box and choose a File location.
• Upload file — choose a saved video file from the Open Video
File dialog box, and click Open.

5

Set any of the following options:
• Create Preview Range Only — renders only the section of video
that is selected between the Trim Markers in the Player panel.
• Enable Smart Render — analyzes a video for any previously
rendered sections and renders only the new or revised sections.
This can reduce rendering time significantly.

6

Click Start.

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A message appears when the upload is complete.
To log in to a different user account, first click the Log Out
button that appears below the YouTube, Facebook, Flickr, and
Vimeo buttons. You can then log in to a different user account.
YouTube currently supports only 3D files in MP4 format, so if
you upload a previously saved 3D video, please ensure that the
older file is compatible. Side-by-Side 3D is recommended.

Creating 3D video files
Corel VideoStudio lets you create 3D video files or convert regular 2D
video to 3D video files. It’s important to refer to the instructions for
your 3D playback device so that you know what type of files and
equipment you’ll need for viewing your 3D video. For example, you
might require only generic red and blue glasses (anaglyph) or you
might require special polarized glasses to view a polarized TV screen.

To create 3D video files
1

In the Share workspace, click the 3D Movie button

2

Click one of the following buttons:

.

• MPEG-2
• AVC/H.264
• WMV
• MVC
3

In the Profile or Format drop-list, choose an option.
If you want to create a custom profile, click the Create Custom
Profile button
. For more information, see “Working with
custom profiles in the Share workspace” on page 275.

4

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Choose one of the following 3D conversion options:

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• Anaglyph — Requires only the red and blue generic anaglyph
3D glasses to view 3D video without the need for special display
monitors.
• Side-by-side — Requires polarized 3D glasses and a compatible
polarized display monitor to view 3D video.
5

In the File name box, type a file name.

6

In the File location box, specify the location where you want to
save the file.

7

Set any of the following options:
• Create Preview Range Only — renders only the section of video
that is selected between the Trim Markers in the Player panel.
• Enable Smart Render — analyzes a video for any previously
rendered sections and renders only the new or revised sections.
This can reduce rendering time significantly.

8

Click Start.
Press the [Esc] key to cancel the rendering process.
A progress bar appears when you render a video. You can use
the buttons on the progress bar to do the following:

• Click the Pause/Play button
on the
progress bar to pause and resume the
rendering process.
• Click the playback button
to enable the
preview while rendering or stop the
preview to reduce rendering time.

The rendering progress bar

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273

Creating video files from part of a project (trimmed)
For any of the sharing categories, you can create a video from part of
your project, rather than the full project, by using the Trim Markers
below the Preview window and enabling the Create Preview Range
Only check box.
For more information about using the Player panel, see “Using the
Player panel” on page 31.

To create a video file from a trimmed range
1

In the Share workspace, click a sharing category, click an output
option, and choose your settings.

2

Ensure that the Create Preview Range Only check box is marked.

3

In the Player panel, click Project.

4

Select a range by dragging the orange Trim Markers to the start
and end points you want.

Only the area between the orange Trim Markers is
rendered

5

In the bottom-right corner of the Share workspace, click Start.

Creating sound files
Corel VideoStudio lets you create a sound file from an existing video
file. This is especially useful when you want to use the same soundtrack
with another set of images, or when you want to convert the audio
from a live performance into sound files. Corel VideoStudio makes it
easy for you to create an audio file of your project in M4A, OGG, WAV
or WMA formats.

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To create an audio file
1

In the Share workspace, click the Computer button
Audio.

2

From the Format drop-list, select an audio file format.

, and click

If you want to adjust the settings for the format, click the Options
button
and adjust any of the settings on the Profile or
Attributes pages.
3

In the File name box, type a file name.

4

In the File location box, specify the location where you want to
save the file.

5

Set any of the following options:
• Create Preview Range Only — renders only the section of video
that is selected between the Trim Markers in the Player panel.
• Enable Smart Render — analyzes a video for any previously
rendered sections and renders only the new or revised sections.
This can reduce rendering time significantly.

6

Click Start.

Working with custom profiles in the Share workspace
Before you output projects from the Share workspace, you can create
and save custom profiles for most video file formats in the Computer
and 3D Movie sharing categories—only the Audio and Custom
output formats do not support custom profiles.
For more information about custom profiles, see “Creating custom
profiles” on page 55.

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To create a custom profile in the Share workspace
1

In the Share workspace, click the Computer button
Movie button

or 3D

.

2

Click an output format button.

3

From the Profile drop-list, click an existing profile to use as a base
for your custom profile.

4

Click the Create custom profile button

5

In the New Profile Options dialog box, click the Corel
VideoStudio tab, and type a name in the Profile name box.

6

Click the General tab, and choose the settings you want.
Note: Additional tabs and settings are available depending on
the type of format you choose.

7

Click OK.

.

The custom profile appears in the Profile drop-list.

To edit a custom profile in the Share workspace
1

In the Share workspace, select the output format for which you
created the profile, and choose the profile from the Profile droplist.

2

Click the Edit custom profile button

3

In the Edit Profile Options dialog box, change the settings you
want and click OK.

.

To delete a custom profile in the Share workspace
1

In the Share workspace, select the output format for which you
created the profile, and choose the profile from the Profile droplist.

2

Click the Delete custom profile button

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Burn discs
Corel VideoStudio lets you burn your projects to a DVD, AVCHD, or
Blu-ray disc. Alternatively, you can export your project to an SD card.
This section contains the following topics:
•

Saving a project to disc

•

Assembling files

•

Adding and editing chapters

•

Editing a menu template

•

Creating advanced menus

•

Previewing your movie and menu before burning

•

Burning your project onto a disc

•

Copying a disc image file

•

Creating disc labels

Saving a project to disc
To output your project to a disc
1

On the Share workspace, click the Disc button.

2

Choose one of the following output formats:
• DVD
• AVCHD
• Blu-ray
• SD Card
A new window appears where you can customize the disc output.

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1

2

8

3 4 5

6

7

Part

Description

1 — Jog Slider

Lets you jump to specific scenes.

2 — Mark-in/Markout

Sets a preview range in the project, or sets the
start and end points for trimming a clip.

3 — Settings and
options

Lets you access the Preferences dialog box
and the Disc Template Manager.

4 — Project Settings

Lets you determine how your movie project is
rendered when you preview it.

5 — Change display
aspect ratio

Lets you select between 4:3 and 16:9 aspect
ratios.

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6 — Navigation
panel

Provides buttons for playback.

7 — Close button

Closes the Create Disc dialog box and opens
the Save As dialog box.

8 — Media Clip List

Displays the added media clips as thumbnails.

Even if you have not saved your VideoStudio Pro project as a
*.vsp file, it can be brought into the Create Disc dialog box for
burning.
Imported videos are automatically adjusted to the correct
aspect ratio (as specified in the Disc Templates Manager dialog
box), and are letterboxed or pillarboxed to fit the correct aspect
ratio.

To save a disc output project
1

On the disc output window, click the Close button.
The Save As window opens.

2

In the File name box, type a file name.

3

In the Save in drop-list, select a file location.

4

In the Save as type drop-list, select a file format.
You can select a file format that is compatible with earlier versions
of VideoStudio.

5

Click Save.
on the disc format button indicates that
Note: A check mark
the disc project has been saved. Click the previously selected disc
format button to continue the disc output process. You can also
edit the disc project at a later time. Click File > Open Project and
select your saved VideoStudio Pro project file (*.vsp).

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Assembling files
You can import videos or VideoStudio Pro project files (*.vsp) that you
want to include in your final movie.

To add videos
1

Click Add video files. Locate the folder where the videos are
stored. Select one or more video clips.

2

Click Open.
Note: After a video clip is added to the Media Clip List, you may
see a black thumbnail that may be caused by a black first frame of
the video clip. To change it, click on the video clip and move the
Jog Slider to the scene that you want. Right-click the thumbnail
and choose Change Thumbnail.

To add VideoStudio Pro projects
1

Click Add VideoStudio project files. Locate the folder where the
projects are stored.
Select one or more video projects you want to add.

2

Click Open.
You can also add videos from DVD, AVCHD, and BDMV discs.
You can trim video clips and VideoStudio Pro projects by using
the Jog Slider, Mark-in/out, and navigation controls. Trimming

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a video gives you the freedom to precisely edit the video
length.

Adding and editing chapters
This feature is available only when the Create menu option is selected.
By adding chapters, you can create submenus linked to their
associated video clip. When you add chapter points to your
VideoStudio project, these are automatically converted to disc menu
chapters. For more information, see “Adding cues and chapters” on
page 62.
You can create up to 99 chapters for a video clip.

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Represented as a video thumbnail in a submenu, each chapter is like a
bookmark for a video clip. When viewers click a chapter, the playback
of the video will start from the selected chapter.
If the Create menu option is not selected, you will be guided to the
preview step immediately without creating any menus after clicking
Next.
When you are creating a disc with only one VideoStudio Pro
project or one video clip, do not select Use first clip as
introductory video if you want to create menus.

To create or edit chapters linked to a video clip
1

Select a video in the Media Clip List.

2

Click Add/Edit Chapter.

3

Drag the Jog Slider to move to a scene that you want to set as a
chapter point, and click Add Chapter. You can also click Auto Add
Chapters to let VideoStudio Pro automatically select chapters.
Note: If you want to use Auto Add Chapters, your video must be
at least one minute long or the video has scene change
information.

4

Repeat Step 3 to add more chapter points.

5

Click OK.
You can also use Remove Chapter or Remove All Chapters to
delete unwanted chapters.
If you click Auto Add Chapters and your video is a DVformatted AVI file, the program automatically detects scene
changes and add chapters accordingly. For MPEG-2 files, the

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program uses the scene change information to automatically
generate chapters.

Creating disc menus
Disc menus allow viewers to easily navigate through the contents of a
disc and easily choose the specific parts of the video to watch.
In Corel VideoStudio, you can create disc menus by applying menu
templates and editing them to suit the requirements of your projects.

To apply a menu template
1

Select Create menu in the 1 Add Media page and click Next. This
takes you to the 2 Menu & Preview page.

2

In the Gallery tab, click the menu template thumbnail to apply it.

To apply layout settings to other menu pages
•

Click Layout Settings in the Edit tab and select Apply to All Pages
of this Menu.

To add background music to menus
1

Click the Set the background music button

in the Edit tab

and choose from a menu of options for selecting an audio file to
be used as background music.
2

In the Open Audio File dialog box, choose the audio file to use.
Note: Click the Set audio properties button
to adjust the
duration of your audio and apply fade in and out effects.

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To add background image or video to menus
1

Click the Set the background button

in the Edit tab and

choose from a menu of options for selecting an image or a video
file to be used as background image or video.
2

In the Open Image File or the Open Video File dialog box,
choose the image file or the video to use.

To add motion menus
1

Select Motion menu in the Edit tab.

2

Adjust the duration of the video thumbnail by setting the number
of seconds in Duration.
Note: Using motion menus increases the file size. Check the disc
space usage indicator and the Required menu space value to
make sure that the file size remains within the limits of your
selected output.

Editing a menu template
To edit a menu template, choose options in the Edit tab or click menu
objects in the Preview Window. You can also add new texts,
decorations and note menus. Customized templates can then be
saved as new menu templates.
If you are authoring Blu-ray discs, you can create advanced menus that
can be used without interrupting playback. This means that viewers
can navigate the contents of your disc while watching the movie.

To edit text style in menus
1

Right-click a text object in the Preview Window and select Font
Attributes.

2

Modify text attributes in the Font dialog box.

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Clicking Font Settings in the Edit tab also opens the Font
dialog box.

To resize, rotate, and distort menu objects
•

Click the menu object in the Preview Window and drag the
handles or nodes.
To revert objects to its previous state, right-click on the Preview
Window and select Set to 0 Degree Angle or Remove Object
Distortion

To align a single menu object
•

Click the menu object in the Preview Window and drag it to the
desired position.
To use the grid lines as reference when dragging the menu
objects, right-click the Preview Window and select Show Grid
Line. To automatically align your object to the nearest grid line
as you drag it, select Snap to Grid Line.
Make sure that the objects are within the TV safe area (defined
by a border with dotted lines).

To align multiple menu objects
1

Select the objects in the Preview Window by pressing [Ctrl].

2

Right-click, select Align, and choose from the following options:
• Left/Top/Right/Bottom — Moves all selected objects (except
model object) horizontally to align left/top/right/bottom side
with the left/top/right/bottom side of model object.
• Center Vertically — Moves all selected objects vertically to the
center of top/bottommost objects.

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• Center Horizontally — Moves all selected objects horizontally to
the center of left/rightmost objects.
• Center Both — Moves all selected objects to the center of top/
bottom/left/rightmost objects.
• Space Evenly Vertically — Moves all selected objects (except
top/bottom most objects) vertically to even vertical space. This
menu item is only available when more than three objects are
selected.
• Space Evenly Horizontally — Moves all selected objects (except
left/right most objects) horizontally to even horizontal space.
This menu item is only available when more than three objects
are selected.
• Equal Width/Height — Resizes all selected objects (except
model object) to the same width/height as model object.
• Equal Width and Height — Resizes all selected objects (except
model object) to the same width and height as model object.

To arrange the Z-order of menu objects
•

Right-click the menu object in the Preview Window, select Align,
and choose from the following alignment options:
• Bring Forward — Brings selected object one layer forward.
• Send Backward — Sends selected object one layer backward.
• Bring to Front — Brings selected object to front.
• Send to Back — Sends selected object to the layer just above
the background object.

To copy and paste shape menu object attributes
•

286

Right-click the menu object in the Preview Window and select
Copy Shape Attributes or Paste Shape Attributes.
Note: You can copy and paste attributes such as width, height,
rotation degree, distortion, transparency, shadows and highlights.
Text boundary, however, cannot be copied.
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To add menu filters and transition effects
1

Click a menu object in the Preview Window.

2

Choose the filter or effects to apply in the Edit tab.
• Moving Path — Applies a predefined motion path to menu
objects such as titles, thumbnail buttons, and navigation
buttons.
• Menu In/Menu Out — Opens selection filters and transition
effects. If a menu template has a Menu In effect, its default
duration is 20 seconds.
Some template menus have sound effects for Menu In and
Menu Out transitions. These sound effects, however, cannot be
modified nor deleted.

Creating advanced menus
Advanced menu templates are made up of three separate layers for
background settings, title menus, and chapter menus. You can edit
menu objects in the currently selected layer.
The illustration below shows the structure of a disc menu.

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Clip 2

Clip 1
Main menu

Submenu #1

In this example, Clip 1 has three chapters, so when you click the Clip 1
video thumbnail, it jumps to submenu #1. If you look at Clip 2, it has
no chapters assigned to it, so when you click Clip 2, the video starts
playing from the beginning.

To add a title menu
•

Click Advanced Settings in the Edit tab and select Add Title
Menu.

To add chapter menus
•

Click Advanced Settings in the Edit tab and select Create Chapter
Menu.

To show the menu thumbnail numbers
•

288

Click Advanced Settings in the Edit tab and select Show
Thumbnail Number.

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To create a menu template:
1

Click Customize in the Edit tab of the 2 Menu & Preview page.
The Customize Menu dialog box appears.

2

Choose from the following options:
• Set the background music — Lets you choose an audio file to
be used as background music.
• Set the background — Lets you choose an image or a video file
to be used as background image or video.
• Font Settings — Lets you apply text attributes.
• Pan & Zoom — Lets you apply pan and zoom effects.
• Motion Filter — Lets you apply motion effects.
• Menu In/Menu Out — Lets you apply menu motion effects.

3

In the drop down menu, select Frame, Navigation Button, or
Layout to display the associated preset thumbnails. Double-click
a thumbnail to apply it.
Note: You can also resize, distort, rotate, and move menu objects
in the Preview Window.

4

Click Add to Menu Template to add the template to the Favorites
folder.
Note: When working in the Customize Menu dialog box, use the
Font dialog box to accurately resize text. The Font dialog box can
also be launched by right-clicking the text and selecting Font
Attributes.

Previewing your movie and menu before burning
Now, it's time to see how your movie looks before you burn it onto a
disc. Simply move the mouse and click Play to watch your movie and
test the menu on your computer. Use the navigation controls here as
you would on a standard remote control of a standalone disc player.

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Burning your project onto a disc
This is the final step in the disc creation process. You can burn your
movie to a disc, save it to a folder on your hard drive, or create a disc
image file so that you can burn the movie at a later time.

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Burning options
• Disc burner — Specifies the settings for your burning device.
•

Label — Enables you to enter a volume name for the Blu-ray Disc/
DVD. The label can contain a maximum of 32 characters.

•

Drive — Selects the disc burner that you want to use to burn the
video file.

•

Copies — Sets the number of disc copies to burn.

•

Disc type — Displays the output disc format for the current
project.

•

Create to disc — Allows you to directly burn your video project
onto a disc.

•

Recording format — Select DVD-Video format to use the DVD
industry standard. To quickly re-edit your disc without copying the
file to the hard drive, select DVD-Video (fast re-editable) which
still complies with the industry standard and has very high
compatibility when working with set-top home DVD players and
computer DVD-ROM.

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•

Create DVD folders — This option is only enabled when the video
file being created is a DVD-Video. The files created are in
preparation for burning the video file to an AVCHD or Blu-ray
Disc. This also allows the user to view the finished disc folders on
the computer using a disc playback software like Corel WinDVD.

•

Create disc image — Select this option if you plan to burn the
video disc several times. By selecting this option, you don't have
to generate the file again when you want to burn the same video
disc. This option is only available for DVD-Video and disabled for
AVCHD, and Blu-ray Disc projects.

•

Normalize audio — Different video clips may have different audio
recording levels when created. When these video clips are put
together, the volume may vary greatly. To make volume levels
consistent between clips, the Normalize audio function evaluates
and adjusts the audio waveform of the whole project to ensure a
balanced audio level throughout the video.

•

Erase — Deletes all the data on a rewritable disc.

•

Burning Options — Adjusts the advanced output settings for
burning your project.

•

Delete temp files — Removes all unnecessary files in your
working folder.

•

Burn — Begins the recording process.

•

Required space — Serves as a reference when you burn your
projects. These indicators help determine if you have sufficient
space to successfully burn your project onto the disc.

•

Required/Available hard disk space — Displays the space needed
by the project and the available hard drive space.

• Required/Available disc space — Displays the space needed to fit
the video file on the disc and the space that is available for use.

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To burn your movie onto a disc
1

Click Next after you preview your project.

2

Click Show more output options and enable one or more of the
following options:
• Create DVD folders — Creates DVD folders in a specified
location.
• Create disc image — Creates an ISO image file of the DVD.
• Normalize audio — Evens out irregular audio levels during
playback.
Note: Create disc image is disabled for AVCHD and Blu-ray Disc
projects.

3

Click More settings for burning.
The Burning Options dialog box appears. Define additional burner
and output settings and click OK.

4

Click Burn to start the burning process.
Click OK when prompted that the task is done.

5

Click Close to save your work automatically and return to the
Corel VideoStudio Editor.

Copying a disc image file
A disc image file is a single file that has captured the entire contents
and file structure of a disc. Creating a disc image file on your computer
allows you to archive the source disc contents for backup or future
burning. You will need sufficient space on your computer to store the
disc image file.

To copy a disc image file:
1

Insert a blank disc into your disc burner.

2

Click Tools > Burn from Disc Image (ISO).
The disc copying dialog box is displayed.

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3

In Source disc image file, browse and select your source disc
image (*.iso) file.

4

Choose your burner drive in Destination.

5

Click Copy to start copying.
Click

to set burning preferences.

Creating disc labels
Create and print disc labels, case covers, and inserts in
Corel VideoStudio. You can add and edit images, texts, and icons to
complete your layout.

To launch the disc label creation dialog box
•

294

Click the Print disc label icon at the lower left part of the Create
disc dialog box.

Corel VideoStudio X10

General tab
The General tab allows you to select a disc label or disc cover template
to start with. You can then customize the overall design of the disc
label, disc cover, insert, or booklet. The actual dimensions of your
media or label in relation to the selected paper size is displayed to
serve as your guide.
Image tab
The Image tab allows you to adjust the properties of your images.
Text tab
The Text tab allows you to format and adjust the properties of your
texts.
Disc label creation options
You can do any of the following tasks when designing a disc label.
•

Files
•

Load Disc Label — Opens a previously saved disc label project.

•

Save Disc Label — Saves a disc label project.

•

Add Image — Selects an image to add on the label.

•

Add Text — Adds a text object to the label.

•

Add Icon — Adds an icon to the label.

•

Playlist — Opens the Add/Edit Playlist Information dialog box to
allow you to add information on the label such as the album title,
artist name, as well as date.

• Clear content — Removes all objects and background from the
disc layout. This is useful when starting over with your design.

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Other options
• Show/Hide Disc — Shows/hides the outline of the disc for better
alignment of images or text.
•

296

Show/Hide Grid — Shows/hides gridlines for laying out images
and text symmetrically.

Corel VideoStudio X10

Glossary
Aperture
This camera setting measures the size of the opening in the lens. It
controls the amount of light that gets into the camera. The aperture
setting is measured in f-stops that follow the format f/number. For
example, f/22.
Aspect Ratio
The relationship of width to height for a given image or graphic.
Keeping or maintaining the aspect ratio refers to the process of
maintaining size relationships when either the width or height of an
image or graphic is changed. In video, the two most common aspect
ratios are 4:3 and 16:9 for Standard definition (SD) and High definition
(HD) Widescreen video formats.
AVI
Audio-Video Interleave is a digital video file format designed
specifically for the Microsoft Windows environment, now commonly
used as storage for several audio and video codecs.
AVCHD
Advanced Video Codec High Definition is a video format that is
designed for camcorder use. It uses a disc structure designed for Bluray Disc / high definition compatibility and can be burned on standard
DVDs.
Blu-ray Disc
Blu-ray Disc is an optical disc format that uses a blue laser for high
definition video recording and playback. Each disc also allows more
information to be burned in 25-GB (single-layer) and 50-GB (dual-

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297

layer) discs, offering more than five times the capacity of standard
DVDs.
Capture
The recording of video or images to a computer hard disk.
Capture Plug-ins
These are utilities integrated with Corel VideoStudio that allow the
program to recognize capture devices and automatically detect them
when they are connected to the computer.
Clip
A short section or part of a movie. A clip can be audio, video, still
images or a title.
Cloud-based storage
A remote storage space that can be used for saving files. Instead of
storing documents and media files on a local drive, files are saved in a
remote database that can be accessed using a Web-connected device.
Several companies offer cloud-based storage services that are available
in both free and paid accounts.
Codec
A special algorithm or program that is used to process video. The origin
of the word is compression/decompression or coder/decoder.
Color Clip
A simple background color used in a movie. It is often used for titles
and credits since they stand out clearly against the solid color.
Compression
Compression is achieved through a codec and works by removing
redundant data or describing it in terms that can be decompressed.
Nearly all digital video is compressed in some way or another but
differs on the degree of compression. The more compressed, the more
resources needed for playback.
Data Rate

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The amount of data per second that is transferred from one part of
your computer to another. These data rates vary in different types of
media.
Device Control
A software driver that allows programs to control video sources like the
camcorder or VCR.
DNLE
Digital Non-Linear Editing is a method of combining and editing
multiple video clips to produce a finished product. DNLE offers random
access to all source materials at all times during the editing process.
Driver
A software program that controls the connection between a specific
device and a computer.
DSLR
A type of camera that uses removable lenses and takes images using a
reflex mirror system. The acronym DSLR stands for digital single-lens
reflex. Compared to compact point and shoot cameras, DSLRs offer
more manual controls and higher image quality.
DV
Digital Video with a capital “D” and a capital “V” stands for a very
specific format of video, just like VHS or High-8. This format can be
understood (played back, recorded) by DV camcorders and your
computer, if you have the proper hardware and software. DV can be
copied from your camcorder to your computer, and then back to your
camcorder (after editing, of course) without any loss of quality.
DVD
DVD (Digital Versatile Disc) is popular in video production because of
its high quality and broad compatibility. Not only does it guarantee
audio and video quality, DVDs make use of the MPEG-2 format, used
to produce discs that are single- or double-sided, and single- or duallayer. They can be played on standalone DVD players or on the DVDROM drive of your PC.
Glossary

299

Effect
In Corel VideoStudio, an effect is a special computer generated
attribute applied to video clips that alters the appearance and quality
of video to achieve a certain look.
Ev
The acronym stands for Exposure Value or the combination of settings
for the aperture, shutter speed and ISO when the camera is in P
(Programmed), S or Tv (shutter priority), or Av (aperture priority) mode.
Adjusting the Ev can either overexpose or underexpose an image
deliberately.
Export
The process of sharing files. When you export a file, the data is usually
converted into a format that is recognizable by the receiving
application. The original file remains unchanged.
Fade
A transition effect where the clip gradually disappears or appears. In
video, the picture would gradually change to or from a solid color; or
from one image to another. For audio, the transition would be from
full volume to complete silence or vice-versa.
FireWire
A standard interface used for connecting digital audio/video devices
such as DV camcorders to computers. It is Apple’s trademarked name
for the IEEE-1394 standard.
Footage
A length of recorded film intended for use in a larger project.
Frame
A single image in a movie.
Frame Rate
The number of frames per second in a video. NTSC video is commonly
29.97 frames per second (fps) while PAL has 25 fps, but smaller video
files can be created on the computer by using lower frame rates.
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Frame Size
The size of displayed images in video or animation sequences. If an
image intended for the sequence is larger or smaller than the current
frame size, it must be resized or cropped.
HDV
HDV is a format for recording and playback of high-definition video on
a DV cassette tape. Announced in 2003 as an affordable high
definition format, HDV video supports resolutions up to 1440 × 1080
and is compressed with MPEG-2. HDV audio is compressed using
MPEG-1 Layer 2.
HTML5
A version of the Hypertext Markup Language (HTML) standard that has
increased feature support compared to previous versions. HTML5 is
particularly useful in integrating audio and video files into web pages.
IEEE-1394
Also known as Firewire, 1394 is standard that allows high-speed serial
connections between the computer and an HDV/DV camcorder, or
other high speed peripheral device. Devices conforming to recent
updates to this standard are capable of transmitting digital data at 400
megabits per second.
Instant Playback
Allows you to view the entire project without rendering. It instantly
plays all the clips in the Preview Window without creating a temporary
preview file in your system. Playback quality is dependent on your
hardware configuration.
If Instant Playback results in drop frames, then use High Quality
Playback to preview a project.
ISO
This camera setting measures the sensitivity of the image sensor. A
lower setting is ideal when there is enough light, while a higher setting
is best when it is dark. Choosing the correct ISO setting reduces the
noise or grain on the captured image.
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301

Key frame
A specific frame in a clip that is flagged for special editing or other
activities in order to control the flow, playback or other characteristics
of the completed animation. For example, when applying a video filter,
assigning different effect levels on the beginning and end frames
shows a change in the appearance of the video from start to end of the
video clip. When creating a video, assigning key frames on parts where
there are high data transfer requirements helps control how smoothly
the video plays back.
Library (Corel VideoStudio)
The Library is the repository for all of your media clips. You can store
video, audio, title, or color clips in the Library and instantly retrieve
them for use in a project.
Link
A method of storing previously saved information in another program
without significantly affecting the size of the resulting file. Linking
offers another advantage in that the original file can be modified in its
original program and the changes will automatically be reflected in the
program where it is linked.
Mark In/Out
Points in a clip that have been marked for editing and trimming
purposes. A section can be selected from a longer clip by setting its
beginning (Mark in) and ending (Mark out).
Metering Mode
This camera setting adjusts the exposure according to the brightness
of the subject. The common options for metering mode include
Evaluative, Partial, Spot, Center-weighted, and Multi-zone.
Motion Tracking
A cinematic and video production technique that tracks specific
objects in video clips. Video elements can be tracked by using selected
and distinct sets of pixels that are used to track movement. This process
can be done by the program automatically, tracked manually, or a

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combination of both. It creates moving paths that can be used in
seamlessly adding 2D and 3D graphics that appear to exist originally
when shooting the video clip.
MP3
Abbreviation of MPEG Audio Layer-3. MP3 is an audio compression
technology that produces near CD audio quality at a very small file size,
making it transfer quickly over the Internet.
MPEG-2
A standard for video and audio compression used in products like DVD.
MPEG-4
A video and audio compression format that is commonly used in
mobile devices and video streaming in the Internet that provides highquality videos at lower data rates.
NLE
Non-Linear Editing. In the past, conventional editing on a VCR was
necessarily linear because of the need to access clips on a video tape in
order. Computer editing can be done in any order that is convenient.
Noise
Noise may be found in audio and video. In audio, it manifests as
unwanted residual hiss while they are random image specks and dots
onscreen in video. These are electronic interferences that are most
common in analog audio and video.
NTSC/PAL
NTSC is the video standard in North America, Japan, Taiwan, and some
other regions. Its frame rate is 29.97 fps. PAL is common in Europe,
Australia, New Zealand, China, Thailand, and some other Asian places,
which has a frame rate of 25 fps. There are other differences. In the
world of DV and DVD, NTSC has the video resolution of 720 × 480
pixels, while PAL has 720 × 576 pixels.

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303

Overlay
These are superimposed video or image clips over existing clips in your
project.
Plug-ins
Plug-ins are utilities that add more functions and effects to a program.
In Corel VideoStudio, plug-ins have made it possible for the program
to automatically recognize capture devices as well as output videos for
different purposes such as for e-mail, Web page, video greeting cards,
and DV recording.
Profile
A profile covers various attributes for a file such as bit rate, number and
type of streams, compression quality, frame size and so on.
Project File
In Corel VideoStudio, a project file (*.VSP) contains the required
information to link all associated image, audio, and video files. With
Corel VideoStudio, you must open a project file before you can edit a
video.
Render
Rendering is the process of making a finished movie from the source
files in a project.
Scenes
A scene is a series of continuous frames. In Corel VideoStudio, each
scene that is captured by using the Split by Scene feature is based on
the recording date and time of the footage. In a captured DV AVI file,
scenes can be separated into several files based on the recording date
and time of the footage or based on changes in the content of the
video. In an MPEG-2 file, the content changes are used to separate
scenes into files.
Shutter Speed
This camera setting measures the amount of time that the shutter
remains open. The shutter speed is measured in seconds. Fast shutter

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speeds are usually in fractions of a second (1/500, 1/250, 1/125, etc.).
Slow shutter speeds are measured as whole numbers (1, 10, 30, etc.).
Smart Render
Smart Render technology saves time when generating previews by
rendering only the parts that have been modified from your last render
operation.
Split by scene
This feature automatically splits up different scenes into individual files.
In Corel VideoStudio, the way scenes are detected depends on which
step you are in. In the Capture workspace, Split by Scene detects
individual scenes based on the original footage's recording date and
time. In the Edit workspace, if Split by Scene is applied to a DV AVI file,
scenes can be detected in two ways: by the recording date and time,
or by the changes in the content of the video. Whereas in an MPEG file,
scenes are detected only based on the content changes.
Storyboard
A Storyboard is a visual representation of your movie. Individual clips
are represented as image thumbnails on the Timeline.
Streaming
Allows large files to be played as they are being downloaded.
Streaming is commonly used for large video and audio files that are
made available on the Internet through video-sharing Web sites.
Template
A work pattern in a software program. They are predefined formats
and settings to serve as guides in making projects.
Timecode
The timecode of a video file is a numerical way of representing the
position in a video. Timecodes can be used to make very accurate edits.
Timeline
The Timeline is a graphic representation of your movie in chronological
order. The relative size of clips on the Timeline gives you an accurate
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305

idea of the length of your media clips and the relative positions of
titles, overlays and audio.
Title
A title can be a movie title, a caption or credit. Any text that overlays
your video can be referred to as a title.
Transition Effect
A transition is a method of sequencing between two video clips, like
fading from one into another.
Trim
The process of editing or cropping a video clip. Videos can be trimmed
frame by frame.
Ultra HD (4K resolution)
A video resolution that is approximately 4,000 pixels in width. It is also
known as Ultra High-Definition or Ultra HD. The term is used to refer
to all screen standards that are at least 3840 x 1080 pixels.
Video Filters
A video filter is a method of changing the appearance of a video clip,
like mosaic and ripple. It can be used as a corrective measure by
compensating for shooting errors and can also be creative by achieving
a certain effect to video.
Voice-over
The narration of a video or movie is commonly called the voice-over.
This is most notable in documentary films.
White Balance
This camera setting measures the color temperature of the subject.
Different lighting conditions affect the way a camera measures the
colors in a scene. Most digital cameras provide preset settings for
automatic, sunlight, cloudy, fluorescent, and incandescent
environments.

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Shortcuts
This section contains the following topics:
• Menu command shortcuts
•

Workspace shortcuts

•

Navigation area shortcuts

•

Timeline shortcuts

•

Multi-trim Video shortcuts

•

Layout settings shortcuts

•

Screen capture shortcuts

• Other Shortcuts

Menu command shortcuts
Ctrl + N

Create a new project

Ctrl + M

Create a new HTML5 project

Ctrl + O

Open a project

Ctrl + S

Save a project

Alt + Enter

Project Properties

F6

Preferences

Ctrl + Z

Undo

Ctrl + Y

Redo

Ctrl + C

Copy

Ctrl + V

Paste

Del

Delete

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307

F1

Help

Workspace shortcuts
Alt + F10

Go to Capture workspace

Alt + F11

Go to Edit workspace

Alt + F12

Go to Share workspace

Navigation area shortcuts
F3

Set mark-in

F4

Set mark-out

L

Play/Pause

Ctrl + P

Play/Pause

Space

Play/Pause

Shift + Play button

Play the currently selected clip

K

Return to the start of clip or
project

Home

Return to the start of clip or
project

Ctrl + H

Return to the start of clip or
project

End

Move to the end segment or cue

Ctrl + E

End

D

Previous frame

F

Next frame

Ctrl + R

Repeat

Ctrl + L

System Volume

S

Split Video

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Tab

Toggle between the Trim
Handles and Scrubber.

Enter

When the left Trim Handle is
active, pressing [Tab] or [Enter]
switches to the right handle.

Left

If you pressed [Tab] or [Enter] to
make the Trim Handles or
Scrubber active, use the Leftarrow key to move to the
previous frame.

Right

If you pressed [Tab] or [Enter] to
make the Trim Handles or
Scrubber active, use the Rightarrow key to move to the next
frame.

ESC

If you pressed [Tab] or [Enter] to
activate and toggle between the
Trim Handles and Scrubber, you
can press [Esc] to deactivate the
Trim Handles / Scrubber.

Timeline shortcuts
Ctrl + A

Select all clips on the Timeline.
Single title: Select all characters
in the on-screen edit mode.

Ctrl + X

Single title: Cut selected
characters in the on-screen edit
mode.

Shift + Click

Select multiple clips in the same
track. (To select multiple clips in
the Library, [Shift] + [Click] or
[Ctrl] + [Click] the clips.)

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309

Left

Select the previous clip on the
Timeline.

Right

Select the next clip on the
Timeline.

+/-

Zoom in/out.

Ctrl + Right

Scroll forward.

Ctrl + Left

Scroll backward.

Ctrl + Up /
Page Up

Scroll up.

Ctrl + Down /
Page Down

Scroll down.

Home

Move to the start of the
Timeline.

End

Move to the end of the Timeline.

Ctrl + H

The previous segment.

Ctrl + E

The next segment.

Multi-trim Video shortcuts
Del

Delete

F3

Set mark-in

F4

Set mark-out

F5

Go backward in the clip

F6

Go forward in the clip

Esc

Cancel

Layout settings shortcuts
F7

Switch to Default

Ctrl + 1

Switch to Custom #1

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Ctrl + 2

Switch to Custom #2

Ctrl + 3

Switch to Custom #3

Alt + 1

Save to Custom #1

Alt + 2

Save to Custom #2

Alt + 3

Save to Custom #3

Screen capture shortcuts
F10

Stop screen capture

F11

Pause / Resume screen capture

Other Shortcuts
ESC

Stop capturing, recording,
rendering, or close a dialog box
without making any changes.
If you switched to Full Screen
Preview, press [Esc] to return to
the Corel VideoStudio
workspace.

Double-click a transition in the
Effects Library

Double-clicking a transition in
the Library automatically inserts
it into the first empty transition
slot between two clips.
Repeating this process will insert
a transition into the next empty
transition slot.

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311

DV-to-DVD Wizard
Using the DV-to-DVD Wizard, you can capture video from FireWireenabled DV and HDV tape camcorders, add a theme template, and
then burn to DVD. This video-editing mode provides a fast and direct
way to transfer your videos to a DVD.
You can launch the DV-to-DVD Wizard by clicking Tools > DV-toDVD Wizard.
This section contains the following topics:
•

Scanning for scenes

• Applying templates and burning to DVDs

Scanning for scenes
Scan the DV tape and select the scenes that you want to add to your
movie.

To scan for scenes
1

Connect your camcorder to your computer, and turn on the
device. Set your camcorder to Play (or VTR/VCR) mode.

2

Select a recording device under Device.

3

Click the Capture format arrow to select a file format for captured
videos.

4

Specify whether to burn all videos of the tape (Burn whole tape)
or scan your DV tape (Scene detection).

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313

To burn the whole tape
1

Select Burn whole tape and then specify the tape duration under
Duration.

2

Click Next to apply the template and burn to DVD.

To use scene detection
1

After selecting Scene detection, choose whether to scan the tape
from the Beginning or Current position.
• Beginning — Scans the tape for scenes from the beginning. The
tape will automatically be rewound if the tape position is not in
the beginning.
• Current position — Scans the tape for scenes from the current
tape position.

2

Specify the scan speed and click Start Scan to begin scanning the
DV device for scenes. Scenes are video segments that are
distinguished by date and time stamps on the DV tape.

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3

In the Storyboard View, select each scene that you want to include
in your movie, and click Mark Scene.

4

Click Next.
Note: To save and import the scanned file without having to rescan it, click the Options button
and select Save DV Quick
Scan Digest. To manage a large number of tapes, click Save DV
Quick Scan Digest as HTML. This feature lets you print the HTML
file and attach it with your tapes.

Applying templates and burning to DVDs
Choose a style template, specify settings, and burn your movies to
DVD.

To apply a style template and burn to DVD
1

Specify a volume name and recording format for your movie.
Note: If you have more than one burner installed on your
computer, or if the default drive is not a burner, specify the burner
that you want to use in the Advanced Settings dialog box.

2

Choose a style template from one of the available presets to apply
to your movie, and then select the output video quality.

3

To customize the theme template text, click Edit Title.

4

In the Begin tab of the Edit Template Title dialog box, doubleclick the text that you want to modify. You can also modify
attributes such as font, color or shadow settings.

5

Click the End tab to modify the text. Click OK.

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315

6

To mark your video clips with date information, click Add as title
in Video date information. Select Entire video if you want the
video to appear from beginning to end, or specify the duration.

7

Click the Burn button

to burn your movie file to a disc.

Note: If the movie is too big to fit onto a DVD, click Fit & Burn.

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Corel® VideoStudio® X10 User Guide
© 2017 Corel Corporation. All rights reserved.
Corel, the stacked and side-by-side Corel logo and Corel Balloon logo
combination, VideoStudio, CorelDRAW, Corel DESIGNER, FastFlick,
Painter, PaintShop, PaintShop Pro, Ulead, WinDVD, WinZip and
WordPerfect are trademarks or registered trademarks of Corel
Corporation and/or its subsidiaries. All other product names and any
registered and unregistered trademarks mentioned are used for
identification purposes only and remain the exclusive property of their
respective owners.
Patents: www.corel.com/patent
Product specifications, pricing, packaging, technical support and
information ("specifications") refer to the retail English version only.
The specifications for all other versions (including other language
versions) may vary.

INFORMATION PROVIDED HEREIN BY COREL IS PROVIDED "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED,
INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABLE,
FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, TITLE AND NON-INFRINGEMENT,
OR THOSE ARISING BY LAW, STATUTE, USAGE OF TRADE, COURSE OF
DEALING OR OTHERWISE. THE ENTIRE RISK AS TO THE RESULTS OF THE
INFORMATION PROVIDED OR ITS USE IS ASSUMED BY YOU. COREL SHALL
HAVE NO LIABILITY TO YOU OR ANY OTHER PERSON OR ENTITY FOR ANY
INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES
WHATSOEVER, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, LOSS OF REVENUE OR
PROFIT, LOST OR DAMAGED DATA OR OTHER COMMERCIAL OR
ECONOMIC LOSS, EVEN IF COREL HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY
OF SUCH DAMAGES OR THEY ARE FORESEEABLE. COREL IS ALSO NOT
LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIMS MADE BY ANY THIRD PARTY. COREL'S MAXIMUM
AGGREGATE LIABILITY TO YOU SHALL NOT EXCEED THE COSTS PAID BY
YOU TO PURCHASE THE MATERIALS. SOME STATES/COUNTRIES DO NOT
ALLOW EXCLUSIONS OR LIMITATIONS OF LIABILITY FOR CONSEQUENTIAL
OR INCIDENTAL DAMAGES, SO THE ABOVE LIMITATIONS MAY NOT APPLY
TO YOU.

This manual may not, in whole or part, be copied, photocopied,
reproduced, translated, or reduced to any electronic medium or
machine readable form without the prior agreement and written
permission of Corel Corporation.



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