One thing I missed... when I silenced the audio of the screen recording, I would have also removed the screen audio... which you may or may not want to do. But not to worry if you did remove audio and you wanted to bring it back, you can right click that clip again and select "Restore Audio"... that brings it back. Hope that helps! :-)
Great video Rob. One of the things that I will do is disconnect the timeline and expand it to the full screen on another monitor because I'll expand the track height to the max so it's easier for me to align the audios cue points. Basically doing the same thing you did but I found looking at the tracks in max view helps me out. You matched yours up like a pro! 👀 I just wanted to share how I do it in case it helps anybody else.
Thanks. Picked up a tip. I've struggled with my audio and video being out of sync recording with camtasia. Their tech support couldn't find a solution so ive had to manually sync which is a bummer because it adds a lot of editing time.
I always sync manually too... but after doing it so often I find it really doesn't take that long any more. My best tip for this is to do the audio syncing at the very beginning of the editing process, before making any cuts. I hope that helps :-)
Way too hard. Go to a pet store and buy one of those little dog training clickers. Use it at start (or better, each section), and immediately line up the click sound when editing. The click sound is clearly visible in your audio wave. However, IMO, this video does not address the real problem most of us face. That is resyncing combined audio and video we have separated. Most us us don't have multiple audio sources to use as a reference like Rob. To sync one source audio/video, you need an old-fashioned movie clapboard, which is both an audio (clap sound) and visual marker (chalkboard with the scene noted). You can make do without a clapboard if you start each scene by videoing yourself saying what scene it is ("Cam sync tutorial take 2") and then clapping your hands at the end of that statement. I find that clapping hands one time in an upright position (like praying) gives you both the audio and visual cue precision you need for the immediate sync of separated audio and visual. You can export your audio alone out of Camtasia, process it, and bring it back in since you want to retain your cues. Cut them out last. This technique works and is fast. Regroup your video as soon as you have synced it for any additional editing you do.
One thing I missed... when I silenced the audio of the screen recording, I would have also removed the screen audio... which you may or may not want to do. But not to worry if you did remove audio and you wanted to bring it back, you can right click that clip again and select "Restore Audio"... that brings it back. Hope that helps! :-)
Wooww I'm just amazed ,this perfect and this what I needed,thx so much
You're welcome! Glad it helped!
Great video Rob. One of the things that I will do is disconnect the timeline and expand it to the full screen on another monitor because I'll expand the track height to the max so it's easier for me to align the audios cue points. Basically doing the same thing you did but I found looking at the tracks in max view helps me out. You matched yours up like a pro! 👀 I just wanted to share how I do it in case it helps anybody else.
Great idea! Thanks for sharing... I'm sure people will find that helpful :-)
Thanks. Picked up a tip. I've struggled with my audio and video being out of sync recording with camtasia. Their tech support couldn't find a solution so ive had to manually sync which is a bummer because it adds a lot of editing time.
I always sync manually too... but after doing it so often I find it really doesn't take that long any more. My best tip for this is to do the audio syncing at the very beginning of the editing process, before making any cuts. I hope that helps :-)
A clap board or just clapping 👏🏼 can help with synchronization as well.
You're absolutely correct :-)
Thhhhaannkk you so much 😊
No problem :-)
thanks a lot
Why do you use obs for screen recording?
Because I was recording Camtasia so didn't want to use Camtasia to record Camtasia... figured some bad things might happen :-)
@@RobtheMaritimer haha good point
Way too hard. Go to a pet store and buy one of those little dog training clickers. Use it at start (or better, each section), and immediately line up the click sound when editing. The click sound is clearly visible in your audio wave. However, IMO, this video does not address the real problem most of us face. That is resyncing combined audio and video we have separated. Most us us don't have multiple audio sources to use as a reference like Rob.
To sync one source audio/video, you need an old-fashioned movie clapboard, which is both an audio (clap sound) and visual marker (chalkboard with the scene noted). You can make do without a clapboard if you start each scene by videoing yourself saying what scene it is ("Cam sync tutorial take 2") and then clapping your hands at the end of that statement. I find that clapping hands one time in an upright position (like praying) gives you both the audio and visual cue precision you need for the immediate sync of separated audio and visual.
You can export your audio alone out of Camtasia, process it, and bring it back in since you want to retain your cues. Cut them out last. This technique works and is fast. Regroup your video as soon as you have synced it for any additional editing you do.
Clap boards or just clapping are definitely great if you only have one audio source. Thanks for sharing!