Enable an optional grid view, zoom using the toolbar below the player, and use the seekbar to jump to the specific time. The video player in the interface is in the preview pane. The layout options in particular are quite nice, and you can save your custom layout with only the panels that you want. You can use the View menu for enabling or disabling the elements. The toolbar has options to undo and redo, as well as toggles for most of the panels on the interface. The Filters panel allows you to add cool effects to your video like fade in/out, text, gain, brightness, contrast, and more. You can also capture stills, record videos from your webcam, and also use your microphone as an audio source. Image formats supported by Shotcut include JPEG, PNG, GIF, BMP, SVG, TGA, TIFF, WebP. Shotcut also supports images and audio tracks, so technically you can create a photostory, or use images at the beginning or the end of a video. Use the toolbar at the bottom of the pane to add/remove items to the playlist or switch the view. If you added more than one file, you will see the Playlist pane and it lists each video that you have added, the duration and thumbnail. Use the File menu or click on the Open File option in the top left corner to add some videos to edit the video will load in the preview pane. You can close these if you don't need them, they can be recalled from the toolbar at the top. There are some panels on the left and right sides of the screen, these are the Filters, Peak Meter and the Recent panes. First things first: select the project folder, name and video mode (resolution) and click on the Start button. The start screen of the application looks complex, but once you get past it, the program turns out to be user-friendly. The application has a ton of features, and in this review, I'm giving you an overview of the program's main functionality. Shotcut is an open source video editor for the Windows, Linux, and macOS operating systems.
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