
Originally Posted by
CoopKill
I have Sony Vegas, Adobe Premier Pro, and Ulead Video Studio...
Listed hardest to easiest to learn. You can do most things in the Ulead software, but are limited in some areas.
Sony, and Adobe are top notch progs where you will get a lot of preference based opinions, rather than which is better. They are extremely different in the work flow, and layout. After learning Ulead first, then Premier, Sony took some time to get used to.
End result will all be great, depending on what your expectations/learning curve will be...
I purposely did not recommend specifically one due to they have a varying price associated to each. The Ulead is the cheapest, and the easiest to learn basics.
Split your raw footage into scenes before trying to edit/splice together. Start with a diagram/script of what you want it to be to save going back and rearranging footage many times.
If you are using multiple camera footage (meaning different cameras), make sure the settings are as close as possible to keep the end result from looking patched/cheap.
Go out and get footage of anything to practice, practice, practice with. Experiment with things to get an idea of all the things that can be done/created with different effects.
In the end, great editing will look far better than a bunch of effects that add nothing to the story...
P.S.
Concentrate on composition, and scene editing before you venture into effects, and color correction stuff...
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