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and that DVD is only scratching the surface. Recently, some friends that are hardened users of FCP (a mere £700) were amazed that a £40 program has all that power. I bought Vegas Production Suite v10 for i-footage only (and Amazon are selling v11 (for -i and -p footage)at under £40), that comes with a 45min DVD Tutorial - but it's hopeless UNLESS you already know Editing. Nowadays they are all black, so you can't colour-code the buttons. yet I discovered most editors work with (nearly) the identical Kyboard Shortcuts, so I'm buying-up odd-colours of nail varnish (discounted) so I can paint one of the two White keyboards I have. ![]() I like LightWorks because they really want you to use their Keyboards (and they have a really fancy editor-desky-thingy at over £1k). If the Adobe product has an "Easy Screen" that might be helpful, as you only need to find out if it works OK to start learning their tricks. It would be far better if they "watermarked" the output but otherwise gave you nearly-full access. #Adobe premiere elements vs sony movie studio free#My experience of Free Trials isn't good, unfortunately the time-limit seems to criple my head and I lose interest. However if you are struggling to get the results you want then a paid for program should make life a bit easier as you will have a large range of new tools to play with. Well what do you want to do that you can't currently do with WLMM? If the answer to this is 'nothing' then why spend money you don't need to. So should you buy one of these (or another) paid for programs? However I should state this was the latest of the 3 programs I used so did have previous experience with using the others, and this may have made it a little easier to learn even though the UI is very different. Sony (Vegas) Movie Studio has a good UI for my tastes and you can learn to do things quickly once you have a basic run through its UI. #Adobe premiere elements vs sony movie studio pro#I've only used the Pro version, and even that was a good few years ago now so can't comment on how different Elements is. But once you know your way around it the workflow is logical and easy enough. However it is easy to use because it only has very limited features.Īdobe Premier has what I consider the steapest learning curve and the UI takes a fair bit of getting used to. WMM has the advantage of being free and very easy to learn and get results from quickly. I have in the past used Windows Movies Makers 2 (and very briefly WLMM), Adobe Premiere Pro and now mainly use Sony Movie Studio v10 Most of these packages are just cut down versions of a fuller Pro version and so tend to have a massive range of tools to get very good results from your footage for not too much money. I'd guess that most of the users of a paid for video editing package only use a small part of the features it is capable of. ![]()
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