CapCut for Desktop
CapCut for Desktop
Capcut is a free video editing app CapCut is available for Mac and PC, I put
together a beginning-to-end tutorial for video editing for beginners using CapCut.
This is my process for editing YouTube videos that I teach my clients and
students!
Modifying Settings
The frame rate will be 30 frames per second, the color space will stay at SDR,
and the free layer will be a fascinating setting. I love that they included this
because if you have it turned on, then CapCut for desktop acts a little bit more
like an actual desktop editor, where you can move your clips around on your
timeline from one track to another really quickly. Once you have your project
settings set up, just hit save at the bottom.
You obviously need to import your media, so click the blue plus button, import,
and this is going to open up the folders. I’m going to go to my external hard drive,
my inbox, and the video that I’m editing, which is DJI mic settings. I have two
screencasts and two regular videos that I shot on my phone. So we’re going to
have A roll and a little bit of maybe B roll plus a screencast. I selected the files
and the actual video files that I’m going to import, and I’m going to choose import.
Now, I will teach you exactly what I teach my students inside of Social Video Pro
in my 30 days to a thriving YouTube channel course. This is the video editing
method that I use and teach others, and I call it the BFF editing method. So we’re
going to start with the letter B for basic. The link to the BFF method cheat sheet
will be right here.
Split Clips
So you can see when I wasn’t talking and then when I was talking. I’m going to
use a little bit of it as B roll. But we’ll get to that in just a moment. This is will be
the beginning of the video. So I have this spot where I stopped talking, and I
need to cut this because right in between here, I kind of messed up my words or I
started over again.
So, I’m going to split this clip because we need to chop up this whole entire clip
to keep the parts where I actually said what I meant to say and get rid of anything
where I made a mistake or I restarted. This is the basic edit. We’re creating a
rough cut.
Trim Clips
And as I’m going along, I’m just finding where I want to split the clip using
Command B or just hitting that split button over here and then selecting what I
want to delete and hitting this little trashcan, and then my two clips come back
together again. And I don’t have a weird space where I deleted something. An
alternative way to clean up your cuts like this might be to just drag the tail end
over to where you want the clip to actually start.
So you’re either taking it like a piece of tape and cutting it up with scissors and
getting rid of the parts you don’t want. Or you’re just trimming the ends of that
piece of tape if all you need is a little bit of an edit at the beginning and at the
end. It really depends on how you shoot your video and how many mistakes you
make when you’re shooting your videos.
Then, I want to move my next clip to my timeline, and we’ll do the same exact
thing to that one. So I’m just going to drag it down. And I’m going to place it right
between my intro and my outro. We can mix things up later, but just to make it
easier on myself I’m going to put it right where I want it in this particular edit. So, I
have a few clips at the end, a few clips at the beginning, and there’s a long clip
that I’m going to chop up next.
Now, I have a rough cut of my intro and my outro and the first part of my A-roll. I
want to point out that everything you’re doing with your clips on CapCut on the
timeline is undo-able. So if you make a mistake, if you miss this here and you’re
like, “Oops, that’s too far,” all you have to do is hit Command+Z and it will go
back. If you want to re-edit the whole thing, that’s fine too.
All of your clips that are up here in your media area, you’re not doing anything
permanent to them. You’re just pulling them into the timeline, cutting them up like
a piece of tape, and then rearranging them. So, you could grab these clips, pull
them up, and drop them in wherever you want them to go. And then if you can’t
remember where it went, just hit undo command Z. And will go back to where it
was before.
You can also use the functions way over on the left to lock your track. If you’re
adding your B-roll, or you’re playing with your background music, you can always
lock a track so that you don’t accidentally do something. You can also make your
track invisible so that it isn’t viewable in the preview window and mute an entire
track.
Depending on your needs or your desires for this video, you could be done with
it, you could export it to YouTube. But what about text and effects and
background music? You may want to fine-tune this a little bit and make it look a
little bit more polished and a little bit more professional. So we’ll talk about fine-
tuning in just a minute. If you are done and want to export your video, we’ll talk
about that at the very end.
So I could just grab it and move it someplace, but I want to put it right back in the
middle. I will be using my guides. If I double-click, then I can just fill in the text
box and start typing. and I can edit the text box on the right-hand side and I can
choose what font I want. I can use the slider to change my font size, and
I could also just type in the number or use the arrows here and we have the
“Style” button.
Text Designs
So we could make it bold, we could make it underlined, or italicized. We can
change the color. There are some preset styles. So if you use the CapCut for
deesktop, you know these styles come in handy. So you can make it with an
outline, or you can reverse it.
And then you also have premade text effects. Those are like basic title screens
and text that you can do in pretty much any editor, but CapCut has a couple of
other features like animation where you can have it fade in/out. If you’re familiar
with text-to-speech options on TikTok, for example, you also have those inside of
CapCut.
Now, I have a little clip of B-roll that I want to have over the top of where I am
speaking. So I’m just going to grab the clip, I’m just going to keep my mouse
button down, I’m going to hold this down, and if I just keep dragging it places, it’s
going to give me these guides and ask me where I want to put this thing.
It just created a whole new track, so I’m going to bring my title up a track. These
tracks are kind of swapping places. So I have my title over the top of my B roll. I
don’t really have much other B roll to add in. But all you have to do is add your
media, decide what you want to add, and then just drag it down. If I wanted this
piece to be B roll, I just drag it down and leave it on the track that I want the B roll
to be on. It’s so easy. In this fine-tuning phase, I’m kind of putting everything
together to finalize everything.
I want to make sure that all the little cuts in between my clips are nice, clean, and
smooth. That usually means zooming way in. So I’m just trimming the ends just a
little bit. At this point, you’ve done your basic edits, your fine-tuned edits, and the
final F in the BFF method is getting a little bit fancy.
Lower Thirds and Background Music
What I’d like to talk about here is adding lower thirds to your videos and adding
background music. And this is pretty easy with the text function. You can easily
add lower thirds by choosing a text template, or even just coming in and using
regular text.
So you have your text, animation, and lower third. There is background music
inside of CapCut that you can use. All you have to do is find the sound you want
to use. Add it with the plus button and it will add to the track and now you have a
background audio track.
I don’t use any software installed background music because I don’t know what
the rights are to that music. And I always want to ensure I’m using royalty-free
background music. I use Epidemic Sound for this. That way, I know that the
background music that I’m using on YouTube, Tiktok, Instagram, Facebook, or
wherever it gets uploaded, is not going to have any copyright claims or copyright
strikes.
I know I’m protected that way when using Epidemic Sound for my background
music. So let me just pull something in from my Epidemic Sound library, so it’s
dropping right in on my timeline. Then what usually happens is that the music is
way too loud, right? What we need to do is bring the volume down a little, and
you can either grab the little volume line and you can see the little arrows that
pop up.
You can grab it and just drag the whole thing down, or you can use the audio
editing pane and drag the volume sliders up and down. So when you’re ready, up
in the top right, you can now choose to Export.
CapCut wants to know where we should export this video to. So that’s where the
video’s final version will go. For me, I’m going to put mine right on my external
hard drive. So my project is at 1920×1080. The resolution doesn’t need to
change. That’s how I wanted the project set up and that’s how I want the
exported file to be as well.
This is a 1080P video. For the bit rate, I’m going to go for the recommended
codec, which is H.264. I want my format to be an MP4 file, my frame rate is going
to be 30 frames per second, and I’m not going to do anything with a cover image
or anything like that. It’ll tell me right down here at the bottom that this video is 7
minutes 13 seconds, 878 MB in size, and hit Export. That’ll take a few minutes,
just like any video editing software will take to export, and then you can upload it
to YouTube.
So now you know how to use the BFF method that I am teaching inside of Social
Video Pro, my 30 Days to a Thriving YouTube Channel Program, and you know
how to use it with CapCut for Desktop so you can create professional looking,
polished YouTube videos. Don’t forget you can download the BFF method cheat
sheet here.