![]() There are a bunch of different built-in presets readily available. A preset will determine the resolution of the video, aspect ratio, what codec it will have, what format it will be, and even whether the compression will be lossy or lossless. From the resolution to all the different optimization settings catered toward different sites and tasks. The preset dictates all the specifications of the video. The preset is a very important part of the exporting process. Now with the exporting menus and options out of the way, you might be asking, what are these presets? We have mentioned presets quite a few times already. What Are Exporting Presets? And How To Use Them? And then the location dictates where the file is, you can change this too. ![]() Then there is the progress, it will not show anything before you start the export. You can click it to toggle between the entire duration of the project and the selected in-to-out area. Then the duration will show the duration of the video. You can easily select another preset from the drop-down menu if you choose to change the default preset. Preset will determine the preset your video will choose for overall settings. You can click to change it it will default to the name of the timeline. The options you will see on the export queue are filename, preset, duration, progress, and output.įilename dictates what the exported video file will be named. I will give you a brief explanation of all of them so you know what you are doing. Now let’s take a look at the options you are presented with within the export queue. The individual clips will be separate videos, they will all have their own entry in the queue. I suggest you use the “In-to-Out Area” options to do that. You can not combine multiple clips and export them like this. ![]() This option always renders individual files for separate clips. From there you can tweak the export options. This will add the individual clips to your export queue. Select one or more clips from your timeline, right-click, and select “Add to Export”. But now let’s talk about individual clips. I discussed methods you can use to export either your entire project or parts of it. That is the method to export specific clips from your timeline. There is still another exporting option that doesn’t exactly fit into the description of exporting projects. The highlighting can be seen on the upper part of the timeline in orange. The In-to-Out area is a selected highlighted area on your timeline that you can manually adjust to export specific parts. While “In-to-Out Area” will select your In-to-Out area and export that. “Contents” will export your entire timeline into one video file. After tweaking the settings as needed you will manually need to start the queue to begin rendering. You can change the preset, filename, location, and resolution from the queue if you want to. The export queue is located on the tab next to the viewer. ![]() “Add to Queue” will add your selected section in the export queue. The rendering will also begin automatically. It will use the default preset and default save location and will not give you an option to rename the file. “Export Now” will start exporting your selected section immediately. They are “In-to-Out Area” and “Contents” Export Now “Export Now” and “Add to Queue” will both show you two more options. The “Default Preset” option is used for managing the default preset and the other two options are used for exporting. Those are “Export Now”, “Add to Queue”, and “Default Preset”. After you click that button, you are greeted with three separate options. This button looks like an arrow with some bars in front of it. You click the button next to the “Export” button. Enter those and save and the file will start rendering immediately in your queue. You will be greeted with the same window that lets you select the path and filename.
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