Whether youre on vacation or in the backyard at home, sometimes youll want to capture events with your camcorder, and other times youll want to take pictures with your digital camera. And sometimes youll want to do both. Wouldnt it be great if you could combine your best video and your favorite digital pictures? With iMovie, you can.
If you plan to include lots of digital pictures in your movie, you may want to organize them first. In iPhoto, create a new album, and then add the pictures in the order in which you want them to appear in your movie.
You may have a poor-quality video clip that contains one great image. With iMovie, you can easily turn any frame of a video clip into a still image to use in your movie. Simply move the playhead to the image in the clip, and choose Create Still Frame from the Edit menu. Your new still clip appears in the Clips pane. If you want to adjust its length, double-click the clip to open the Clip Info window and enter a new length for your still image.
The method for changing the length of an image in your movie depends if it is a still image or has the Ken Burns effect applied. For a still image, double-click the clip to open the Clip Info window and enter a new length for your still image. For an image with the Ken Burns effect applied, select the image, then adjust the duration slider at the bottom of the Photo Settings pane, and click Apply. Of course you can also edit any clip directly in the timeline by choosing the Split Video Clip at Playhead from the Edit menu.
You can also search your iPhoto Library from within iPhoto to find just the right picture for your movie. When you locate the picture you want, drag it from iPhoto to the iMovie Clips pane or the timeline.
Many digital cameras let you take short video clips. This can be useful if youre at an event without your camcorder. When you import your photos into iPhoto, these movies will also become part of your Photo Library. You can then drag these movie clips to your iMovie project and edit them, just like the footage you take with your camcorder.
Within iMovie, when your project is set as HDV or DV Widescreen, the Photos pane is pre-set for 16:9 aspect ratio, allowing you to crop a photo to the same aspect ratio of your video footage.
If youre editing your pictures in iPhoto, for use with an HDV or DV widescreen iMovie project, go to Edit mode, and then choose 16 x 9 (HD) from the Constrain pop-up menu in the bottom toolbar. This will constrain the crop tool to a 16:9 ratio—the same used in your video footage. This way, you can take advantage of the great editing tools in iPhoto.
Youre not limited to using only digital photos in your movie. Consider scanning your old pictures and including them. For example, you could scan your parents wedding pictures to use in a video you make for their wedding anniversary.
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