Which Editing Software do you use?
Hello Instructors!
We know that everyone has their own style of video creation because we’ve already seen your different audio & visual setups. But for this discussion, we’d love to know which software you are using to pull it all together?
Which editing software do you use and why do you use it?
Comments
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Camtasia every time.
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@SimonKloot
I've been considering Camtasia for a while. What are the benefits of using it over OBS + Final Cut Pro which is what I use?4 -
I use Camtasia for screencast recording and video editing and Audacity for audio editing.
The reason I chose Camtasia is that Udemy (5+ years ago) partnered with Techsmiths to provide instructors 50% OFF licenses, so I got it at a discounted price, it suits my needs well, and with the maintenance plan, I always get the latest version every year. I use Audacity because it's free, and it works very well.7 -
Davinci Resolve, it's free and does its job to create amazing edits.
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I currently use DaVinci Resolve 18, but I have used Camtasia Studio 8. I recommend Camtasia to anyone that needs nothing more but simple editing and a screen recording incorporated within the software. Camtasia is really great, still DaVinci is the winner for me!
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I use Camtasia and use Izotope RX for audio editing. I find RX is great for easily cleaning up sounds and especially removal of breath sounds. The automated removal of breaths has really sped up my video editing times.
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I use Camtasia as well!
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ScreenFlow for screen recordings + editing. iZotope RX for audio post-processing.
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Screen flow it works a treat
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Camtasia. At this stage, I don't want to spend any more time than necessary editing. Camtasia is extremely powerful, yet also easy to use, and with the Assets Pack, I get tons of customizable, prebuilt, professional looking and sounding material. It's all I need for now.
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Thanks @AHardin. Are there currently any discounted licenses for Camtasia?
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Thanks for sharing Izotope RX. I'm currently using Audacity with plugins to de-ess and remove breathing sounds, but Izotope RX seems like a better solution. Are you able to set up macros to automate the audio editing process with it?
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I don't think Udemy partners with them anymore, but you can ask Udemy. I do know that TechSmith runs sales periodically. I'd check their website.
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I use and like Camtasia as its easy to use and they have good supporting tutorials. Plus lots of other tutorials on YouTube and courses on Udemy. I am not a video editing expert at all but can I am on camera and also will do some screen shares.
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Camtasia.
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Adobe Premiere Elements.
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My courses are 99% screencasts, so I use Screenflow on my Macbook, and even use it to edit talking heads and promo videos.
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Camtasia
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Camtasia is a lot more intuitive for me than OBS.
I haven't used Final Cut Pro.
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I'm using vn editor on my Ipad . It's free and easy to use video editor , as I'm making educational treading information video so I don't need any high level editing or cinematic shoot .
VN VIDEO EDITOR is enough for me fast and simple
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Camtasia! It is easy to use, and you get amazing results
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I think that old promotion is also what sucked me in with Camtasia, and I still use it to this day.
It does what I need, but I have to admit the licensing fee for it seems a bit high for what it is. It's also annoying that I need to buy additional licenses for every computer I might edit on.
I do wish Camtasia offered some more modern-looking motion graphics, lower-thirds, and intro/outro templates though. Even with their add-on packages there's not much that really looks like the style I have in mind.
I've never used DaVinci Resolve, but I've been eyeing it with curiosity...
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Camtasia before my PC updates to Windows11 and rendered it useless. Now I rely on a combination of Filmora and OBS, which is definitely not as good as Camtasia was.
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Screenflow for screencast based courses, Premiere Pro when I'm recording mostly talking head/demonstration-based courses.
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Adobe Premiere Pro for video editing because it provides a lot of flexibility and customization tools, Bandicam for screen recording (I had a license so I am going with it), and Adobe Audition for audio recording and editing (I know just enough to get good editing results and it comes with the Adobe Suite that I know a bit about from my college days).
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I use NCH. DebutVideoCapture for recording, Photopad for photo editing, Wavepad for sound editing and Videopad for video editing. I find them all very user friendly, not that expensive and they do exactly what I require of them. It has excellent functionality across all their software. It seems a lot of instructors use Camtasia. Never tried it. Might do one day but at the moment, I am very satisfied with the NCH packages.
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Inshot app
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I use Icecream Screen Recorder for recording screencasts and then edit them in Adobe Premiere Pro. I also have Audacity installed on my laptop but rarely use it.
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I agree that the licensing isn't as great as it needs to be, but, overall, I don't think it's too bad when you compare it to Adobe and others in the software industry that use a monthly subscription business model.
It's not the best software in the industry, is very CPU intensive (doesn't like using GPU power) and I agree that TechSmith hasn't really innovated their animations library, but it gets the job done, is easy to use, and suits the needs for probably 90% of the instructors here.0 -
Camstia studio. Due to its ease of use for my screen recording. Audio is also recorded at the same time in same file.
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