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Home > Solution Guides > How to Import your camcorder video to your Mac PC?
How to Import your camcorder video to your Mac PC?
11/29/2007 Mac
After you capture great footage with your FireWire camcorder, you're ready to make a movie. First you'll need to connect your camcorder to your Mac, and then copy footage from the camcorder into iMovie, a process known as importing. iMovie makes importing easy. When you import video into an iMovie project, it automatically divides your video into individual clips, making it easy to edit.



Step 1

Use a FireWire cable to connect your camcorder to the FireWire port on your Mac, then switch your camcorder to VCR, VTR, or Play mode.

Step 2

Open iMovie and create a new project by clicking the Create a New Project button or by going to the File menu and then choosing New.

Step 3

Type a name for your project and choose a location. By default, iMovie chooses the Movies folder on your hard disk.

Step 4

Click the disclosure triangle to select a video format. You'll probably want to use DV, unless you're using an HDV camera, an iSight, or you shot your video in widescreen format. Click Create.

Step 5

iMovie will open your new project in camera mode and display the message Camera Connected.

Step 6

Use the playback controls in iMovie to rewind to where you want to start importing your video.

Step 7

Click the Import button. Watch as the clips appear in the iMovie Clips pane. iMovie will create a new clip whenever you stopped the camcorder while recording. This helps you easily identify scene breaks.

Step 8

When you're finished importing, click the Import button again to stop the import process.

Step 9

To review your imported video, select a video clip in the Clips pane and click the Play button.

Step 10

Save your project by choosing Save Project from the File menu.

Tips

iMovie automatically detects your camcorder
iMovie will automatically detect when you have a FireWire camcorder connected. If you see the message No Camera Attached, make sure your camera is turned on and properly plugged in to your computer via a FireWire cable and that your camcorder is set to VCR, VTR, or Play mode. You can also click the Connection Help button for more suggestions.

iMovie supports different video formats
When you create your project, choose the appropriate video format depending on your needs. For importing video from your camcorder, choose between DV, DV Widescreen, HDV 1080i, and HDV 720i. For recording from your iSight, select iSight. If you will be copying MPEG-4 files from your PDA or phone, select MPEG-4.

Import directly to the iMovie timeline
You can import footage directly from your camcorder to the iMovie timeline rather than to the Clips pane. This is a quick and easy way to get your footage into your iMovie project. You can then edit right in the timeline. From the iMovie menu, choose Preferences, click Import, and then choose the option Place clips in Movie Timeline.

If you're importing video that is already edited
Instead of importing your video as separate clips, you can set iMovie to import your video as a single clip. This may be useful if you're importing a movie that you've already edited and you just want to change a small portion. From the iMovie menu, choose Preferences, click Import, and then deselect the "Start a new clip at each scene break" option. If you prefer, select "Limit scene length to" and set a limit for the number of minutes. This will ensure your imported files don't get too large, in case you'll be copying clips between iMovie projects.

What you need to make a high-definition video with iMovie
High definition video is quickly becoming the format you see broadcast on TV. An HD camcorder stores more pixels than a standard camcorder, letting you see more detail in your video footage. iMovie supports importing and editing video from HD camcorders (HDV 720p and 1080i), so you can make movies just like the pros-and it's a great way to archive your most precious life events in the highest resolution possible

Using video from an MPEG-4 camera
Many digital still cameras, PDAs, and mobile phones let you record short videos in the MPEG-4 format, a standard compression that is used to significantly reduce the file size of video. While iMovie doesn't know how to import video from these devices directly, as it does with FireWire devices, you can still use the MPEG-4 files once you've copied them to your Mac. Just drag them into the iMovie Clips pane using the Finder or import them using Import from the File menu.

Using video from your connected or built-in iSight camera
You can use your iSight camera to record video directly into your iMovie project. This means you can spontaneously add clips to your project while you're working on it. Just connect your iSight camera to the FireWire port of your Mac and you're ready to start recording. If you have more then one camcorder connected, such as an iSight and a camcorder,-or you have an iMac with a built-in iSight-choose iSight from the pop-up menu that appears when you switch to camera mode.

Monitor the amount of hard disk space remaining
Digital video clips use a large amount of hard disk space. For example, five minutes of DV footage uses approximately 1GB of space. The same amount of HD video can occupy between 2GB to 4GB, depending on the format and footage. To save hard disk space, import and edit your video in sections instead of trying to do so all at once. You can see how much space remains on your hard disk by using the monitor located in the lower-right corner of the iMovie window.

Topics:
camcorder video
mac pc
video to mac pc
imovie
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