When zooming in and out (in video clips) I hear the camera noise in native sound. Is there an easy way to edit these clicks out? They are too short to edit out in sound editor.
7.5 VideoWave production, how edit sound in movie clips
Started by
MEMartin
, Jul 26 2006 01:42 PM
4 replies to this topic
#1
Posted 26 July 2006 - 01:42 PM
#2
Posted 26 July 2006 - 07:27 PM
MEMartin, on Jul 26 2006, 05:42 PM, said:
When zooming in and out (in video clips) I hear the camera noise in native sound. Is there an easy way to edit these clicks out? They are too short to edit out in sound editor.
You should be able to reduce the volume of the "noisy" section using the Audio Editor from within Videowave. Just double click on the native audio track to open the audio editor and change the audio envelope for your audio.
Search the Help System for "Controlling the audio envelope" on how to do this
Walt
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#3
Posted 27 July 2006 - 05:40 AM
myguggi, on Jul 26 2006, 07:27 PM, said:
You should be able to reduce the volume of the "noisy" section using the Audio Editor from within Videowave. Just double click on the native audio track to open the audio editor and change the audio envelope for your audio.
Search the Help System for "Controlling the audio envelope" on how to do this
Search the Help System for "Controlling the audio envelope" on how to do this
The problem is that the nasty sound bit is so short that this is difficult. I will try to stretch it out in the editor and see if I can do that. Thank you.
#4
Posted 27 July 2006 - 07:47 AM
MEMartin, on Jul 27 2006, 08:40 AM, said:
The problem is that the nasty sound bit is so short that this is difficult. I will try to stretch it out in the editor and see if I can do that. Thank you.
Do you have the Native sound track displayed?
If so, double click on that track to bring up the Sound Editor. The magnifying glass near the top will allow you to 'stretch out' the track.
You can play until you get to the sound, then advance or go back frame by frame to locate the sound. When you get to the sound, then use the magnifying glass to make the editing area larger.
You can then use the 'hand' to insert four points on the line. Drag the two middle to the bottom 'mute' point and the sound should disappear.
Or use the Advanced tab to see if you can eliminate the sound by decibal level.
You might not be able to get rid of it entirely, but you should be able to minimize the sound.
ml
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Intel® Core™2 Duo 2.2 Ghz desktop processor E4500;
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DL DVD±RW/CD-RW drive;
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Multiformat media reader,
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#5
Posted 30 July 2006 - 02:22 PM
mlpasley, on Jul 27 2006, 07:47 AM, said:
Do you have the Native sound track displayed?
If so, double click on that track to bring up the Sound Editor. The magnifying glass near the top will allow you to 'stretch out' the track.
You can play until you get to the sound, then advance or go back frame by frame to locate the sound. When you get to the sound, then use the magnifying glass to make the editing area larger.
You can then use the 'hand' to insert four points on the line. Drag the two middle to the bottom 'mute' point and the sound should disappear.
Or use the Advanced tab to see if you can eliminate the sound by decibal level.
You might not be able to get rid of it entirely, but you should be able to minimize the sound.
If so, double click on that track to bring up the Sound Editor. The magnifying glass near the top will allow you to 'stretch out' the track.
You can play until you get to the sound, then advance or go back frame by frame to locate the sound. When you get to the sound, then use the magnifying glass to make the editing area larger.
You can then use the 'hand' to insert four points on the line. Drag the two middle to the bottom 'mute' point and the sound should disappear.
Or use the Advanced tab to see if you can eliminate the sound by decibal level.
You might not be able to get rid of it entirely, but you should be able to minimize the sound.
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