Kdenlive: Difference between revisions

From KDE UserBase Wiki
(Marked this version for translation)
m (forgot ,)
Line 16: Line 16:
* Audio files, in multi-track, can be cut to tight synchronisation with your video
* Audio files, in multi-track, can be cut to tight synchronisation with your video
* A wide range of effects and transitions are included and can be customized
* A wide range of effects and transitions are included and can be customized
* Wide range of supported codecs for both input and output: DV (PAL/NTSC), MPEG2 (PAL/NTSC/HDV), Flash FLV, WMV, AVCHD (HDV), H.264, H.265, WebM (VP8, VP9), lossless ProRes MP3, AC3, OGG Vorbis, FLAC and more
* Wide range of supported codecs for both input and output: DV (PAL/NTSC), MPEG2 (PAL/NTSC/HDV), Flash FLV, WMV, AVCHD (HDV), H.264, H.265, WebM (VP8, VP9), lossless ProRes, MP3, AC3, OGG Vorbis, FLAC and more





Revision as of 23:04, 26 January 2016

Kdenlive 15.12's dark skin

Kdenlive is a feature-rich non-linear video editor:

  • Supports a wide range of old as well as modern webcams, cameras and camcorders
  • Multi-track format allows interleaving of video and sound
  • Auto-save and undo support
  • Audio files, in multi-track, can be cut to tight synchronisation with your video
  • A wide range of effects and transitions are included and can be customized
  • Wide range of supported codecs for both input and output: DV (PAL/NTSC), MPEG2 (PAL/NTSC/HDV), Flash FLV, WMV, AVCHD (HDV), H.264, H.265, WebM (VP8, VP9), lossless ProRes, MP3, AC3, OGG Vorbis, FLAC and more


Learn Kdenlive with:

  • QuickStart for a short hands-on tutorial.
  • Manual for elaborate description of Kdenlive.
  • Tutorials mostly for learning specific tools or effects.


Get involved by contributing to this documentation, joining the community wiki and reporting issues.

Kdenlive has made appearances in the tech press:

  • 2009-10-15 Linux Journal wrote a comprehensive review, which ended with the verdict "There's a lot to like about Kdenlive, and I like it a lot. Its feature set is full enough to satisfy basic desktop video production needs, and its workflow is uncomplicated and easy to learn."