You can use VEED to slow down your videos and create cool slow-motion effects online. Export your videos as GIFs, or as a video and share your content online with ease. Our online video editing app is perfect for light editing tasks. It is free to use with no signup required, give it a try!

VEED is a powerful online video editor that works right in your browser. No need for iMovie, or downloading software; change the speed of your videos in seconds, online! It features full slow-motion control. Take fine control over slowing down your video clips with VEED. Split your clips, slow down certain parts, and create awesome effects.


Slow Motion Video Editing App Download


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Making slow-motion videos is so easy, you can do it with a single click. Adjust speed - slow down, speed up - using our simple speed tool. Just upload your video, set the speed by choosing from the speed options, or enter a custom speed.

Apart from slowing down your videos, VEED can also increase their speed. To speed up your video, simply select a speed starting from 1.5x and above. Just click on your video on the editor and click on the speed you want.

Creating amazing slow-motion videos is not the only thing you can do with VEED. We have a full suite of video editing tools to help you create amazing videos. Our users love using our app for subtitling videos, adding text and stickers too. Check out how simple it is to make great videos online with VEED!

Turn your video into slow motion in only two clicks, without losing any quality. Even if your video gets slower frame by frame, keep your slow motion video high quality by confirming your export settings as high as 1080p or 4K resolution. With Kapwing, you have full control over your videos from start to finish.

This all-in-one slow motion video editor gives you everything you need to create, edit, and share your videos. Turn a regular video into slow motion by adding a slow motion effect. Add more effects like thefreeze frame, the Ken Burns effect, and other video transitions in just a few clicks.

In the Photos app , you can trim a video you recorded on your iPhone to change where it starts and stops. You can also adjust the portion of a video that appears in slow motion when you record in Slo-mo mode.

I'm quite new to Arma 3 as well as scripting but after some research I managed to create a slowmotion/normal speed trigger attached to the radio channels Echo and Foxtrot so I can slow down time in order to give my units commands and stuff (I know i suck at it in regular speeds lol). Anyways, I managed to installed Iron Fronts in Arma 3 and I tried to do the same but, as you guys already know, the Iron Front units cant use radios so I got stuck and I have no idea how to create a mission in which Im able to activate those triggers. Could anyone here help me?

I am trying to edit the videos i took from my dji mini 2 drone in premiere pro but i am not sure why my video is lagging when i change some of the videos to slow motion. Can someone please advise what the issue is because i have seen that this happens if hardware is slow however if i export the video same issue is happening and the other scenes where the video speed is normal runs very smoothly. How can i make sure the slow motion shots are running smoothly for the drone shots?

I am running the latest Shotcut Version on Mac 10.11 . I have followed discussion etc but changing the Speed (Geschwindigkeit, as I am suing the German version) in the Properties dialog of teh clip simply wont do anything. No matter if I type the number or use the small arrows. So how can I slow mo my movies. From youtube tech videos it appears to be working on Windows.

If instead of puting 120 fps you put 20 fps you will be reduncing the speed and making a slow motion. In the end just save the video and add it to the Shotcut project you are editing. I hope this will help you.

thanks for the help but so far nothing worked. I used clips from three different cameras (Casio EX F1 which makes wonderful slow mo but in this case I used 29,97 fps clips, Nikon at 60 fps and Olympus at 30 fps.) I also tried the movies in the timeline vs the movies in the playlist.

I do have iMovie to make slow motion films, and I guess the new Photoshop with a timeline will do the same, but having this feature work in ShotCut would be much better than doing separate movies and included them. (and recompress them so many times).

With your files in Flixier drag them on the timeline and on the right side of the screen you will find the Video Speed slider. To make a slow motion video drag the slider to the left to decrease the playback speed of your video.

To turn a video into slow motion first drag it on the Flixier timeline. Now, look on the right side of the screen and you will find a slider for Video Speed. Move that slider towards the left to decrease the speed of the video and end up with a slow motion effect.

You can easily turn a video into slow motion after recording with Flixier. Import your media files into our online video maker, drag them on the timeline and use the Video Speed slider found on the right side of the screen to turn any video into a slow motion one.

Hi. Sorry for asking such a basic question. Do people usually add the slow-motion effect afterwards in post production (editing), or do they usually set the camera on the slow-motion mode during filming? Same question goes for fast motion. It's for a short documentary. Thanks.

Thank you both, but I still didn't get the answer. I can record the video in slow-motion mode (the camera has the feature), or I can do it afterwards with the editing software. My question is, what's the more rational way? What does everyone do?

If you want to do it after the fact, you still need to set the camera up specifically for this. Most videos are played back at frame rates between 24 and 30 fps. To have a smooth slow-motion clip at that frame rate, you need to record the video at a faster rate and then slow it back down in editing. For example, a 60 fps clip played back at 30 fps is a "2x slow motion." If you record at 30 fps and then slow it down, the video will look jittery and not smooth, because our eyes can detect individual frames at lower frame rates.

I am currently in the process of synching media for a feature. Everything was shot in 24fps except for a few slow-mo action shots that were filmed in 72fps, which have externally recorded sound. I am currently looking for the best way to sync the audio for these clips. The high framerate shots were initially provided to me by the lab interpreted as 24 fps in DnxHD 115 MXF (so 3x times slower than normal in playback).

I've tried converting the media file back to 72fps but then I can't import it into the project unless I consolidate it to 24fps and loose two thirds of the frame, which means that the slow-mo will be a choppy mess in editing all the way until it is conformed outside of avid with the original 72fps file.

So what's the best way to go about this? I understand that avid doesn't manage mixed frame rates but I imagine that there must be a solution to this, given how common high framerates and slow-mo is nowadays. Or is it impossible to get synchronized audio on a high fps shot like this ?

Previously I used AVS Video Remaker and AVS Video Editor. One of the tools on those editors that I used very often, was to play a full-speed video back at a much slower speed for editing. Basically I want to be able to stop the video at the exact moment that something happens in the video, to identify the exact point in the timeline where the event happens, so I know where to insert my audio clip.

Now, I am noticing that VLC media player does a great job of slow-motion playback, but so far as I can discover the time counter only updates by whole seconds, which is useless for my purpose. I guess I could use AVS Video Remaker to play a clip back slowly and identify the exact points on the timeline I'm interested in, and then use Videopad to do my actual editing once those points are known. But I really don't want to have to load my videos into two separate editing programs!

Frustrating-- so let's say I have a long sequence of clips on the time line, with lots of splits. I want to see when some event happens, to great precision. if I just click one on single clip, and CHANGE CLIP SPEED, then my timeline is not uniform. If I clip on EVERY clip , and say cut the speed in half, sure, the actual time of the event is one half of the time that I observe on the slowed time line-- but it can take an awful lot of time to go click on every single clip, and it's easy to miss one. Ditto when cranking them all back up to full speed. Frustrating! All i want to do is play the whole timeline sequence back at a slowed speed while editing, without changing the correlation between the numbers on the timeline and the events on the video. Like I did on the other editing programs mentioned in the original post.

Frustrating! All i want to do is play the whole timeline sequence back at a slowed speed while editing, without changing the correlation between the numbers on the timeline and the events on the video.

It used to be you could edit the slow motion of a slow motion video on your macbook after downloading the slow motion video from your iPhone to your Macbook. This does not seem to be possible anymore as I cannot adjust the slowmotion in Quicktime the way I could before (and thus restore the precious audio that has been lost to the slow motion). Anyone know how to get around this problem? I need the audio from the slow motion clip but I deleted it from my phone! When I airdrop the video back to my iPhone the slow motion controls are no longer available in the edit pane. What a pain! e24fc04721

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