Top Banner
How to use Windows Movie Maker
18
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: How to-use-movie-maker

How to use Windows Movie Maker

Page 2: How to-use-movie-maker

Using the Tools1

2

3

4

Page 3: How to-use-movie-maker

The Task Pane1. Capture video actually allows you to import video,

pictures, and audio. Just click and navigate to your file (avi, jpg, gif, mp3, etc…)

2. Edit Movie allows you to add effects and transitions to your videos, pictures, and audio. It also lets you add titles and credits to your movie.

3. Finish Movie turns your project into the movie. You MUST save it to your computer for the final product. Your project is a .mswmm file, but the final project must be .wmv.

4. If you lose the task pane, go to View>Task Pane from the top menu items.

Page 4: How to-use-movie-maker

The Collection Field

The Collection field is where your picture, audio, and sound files will appear after you import them from Step 1 of the Capture Video option. Above, you see a sample of a sound file, video file, and a picture file.

Page 5: How to-use-movie-maker

Your Video

The Video gives you the preview of the movie you’re making. After placing an object into a timeline or storyboard field, you can run your movie to see how it will look.

Page 6: How to-use-movie-maker

The Timeline Tool

The timeline allows you to edit sound and pictures together. You can drag video and sound files from the collection field to the Audio track. It’s best to use audacity of you want to use multiple sounds.

Along the top, you can see the time sequence of the movie. You can use the magnifying glass to zoom in or out on the time. You can shorten a video clip from the end, but you cannot make it longer. You can edit the middle, but it’s tricky to do.

Page 7: How to-use-movie-maker

The Storyboard Tool

The storyboard is easier to work in, especially for pictures. From the Collection. Just drag and drop the file into the larger boxes in the order you want them to appear. You can drag and drop pictures and videos, but not sounds files with it automatically switching you back to the Timeline view.

Page 8: How to-use-movie-maker

Video Effects

You can add effects to your pictures and sounds using Video Effects found in Step 2, Edit Movie found in the Task Pane. When you select this, you’ll see a small star appear on your storyboard slide. Just click on View Video Effects and drag the desired effect onto the star. You can add two effects to one slide.

Video Effects

Page 9: How to-use-movie-maker

Transitions

The smaller boxes are from transitions you pick from Step 2, Edit Movie. Just click View Video Transitions from the Task Pane and click and drag the desired transition effect. If you want to use the same transition, you can insert the transition into the first small box, click back in the box, copy it, and then paste it into the rest of the small boxes.

Sample Transitions

Page 10: How to-use-movie-maker

Make Titles or Credits

In Step 2, Edit Movie, click on Make Titles or Credits. You’ll get this menu in the next window.

Page 11: How to-use-movie-maker

Make Titles or Credits

Places a title as the first slide. Places text before the chosen

slide.

Places text on a slide.

Places text after the chosen

slide.

Places a title as the last slide.

Page 12: How to-use-movie-maker

Make Titles or Credits

Each option allows you to pick an effect, font, color, and font size. You can also pick animation for your text.

For each of these, you can see how it will look in the Video field.

Page 13: How to-use-movie-maker

Audio/Music Field

In your Timeline field, you can add different sounds. However, in Movie Maker, you can only have one sound playing at a time. So, if you want soft sound playing behind your recorded voice, you cannot do that. You should use Audacity to layer sounds, save that as an MP3 file, then import that MP3 into Movie Maker.

With other sounds, you can shorten them by moving your mouse to either end of the sound file (where the triangle is in the picture above for example, and once the hand turns into a double red arrow, you can shrink the size of the audio file.

You can also shift the sound files in the Timeline view by clicking and dragging the sound field to the left or right.

Page 14: How to-use-movie-maker

Converting your project

To finish your movie, Got to Step 3, Finish Movie. Choose Save to My Computer.

The Save Movie Wizard window will open.

Step 1, Name Your Movie

Step 2, Save it to your desktop

Page 15: How to-use-movie-maker

Converting your project

To finish your movie, Got to Step 3, Finish Movie. Choose Save to My Computer.

The Save Movie Wizard window will open.

To get the best quality:

Step 3, You’re best off choosing the bottom button and choosing High Quality Video. This may not always be the best option however.

When you click next, the movie will convert. It may take a while depending on the length of your movie.

Page 16: How to-use-movie-maker

Reminders

While you are working on your project in the .mswmm file, you can edit anything you need to edit. This is not the final copy.

Once converted, your movie will be a .wmv file. You cannot edit this anymore. But this is the version you want to give people. So make sure you are 100% satisfied with the .mswmm version before converting to .wmv.

Page 17: How to-use-movie-maker

Movie Maker Ideas

Student Uses

Digital Stories

Multimedia Research Project

Interviews

Digital Poems

PowerPoint Reviews

Study Guide for iPods

Documentaries

Teacher Uses

Digital Stories

PowerPoint Reviews

Study Guide for iPods

Create your own 5 minute movie

Create a movie for classroom rules

Page 18: How to-use-movie-maker

Cross Curricular

When creating an assignment with your students, see if you can incorporate another class. For example, can your project on the 1930s Dust Bowl also use “The Grapes of Wrath” from English.

If you’re creating a documentary on a volcano in science, can you use math standards to show the calculation of the eruption, or volcano created tidal wave?

Can your art class draw pictures that match a geography lesson in a Spanish class?