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I don't have any money to purchase any cool editing softwares like filmora. I just want a video editor than can help me edit school projects and has above-average editing features. Right now I use canva education, but it literally drives me insane.
free as in free beer - your best choice is probably davinci resolve. Could also try hitfilm (but the free version has less features). Free as in freedom - Kdenlive is great.
I've only done two funeral videos, both for loved ones. I used VHS footage that had been digitized and photos that had been scanned in. I brought them both into Premiere and cropped the photos to fill the whole screen and keyframed them to zoom in.
The best free free (open source) software in my option is Kdenlive. It is quite feature rich and the learning curve is not quite as steep as Davinci Resolve. That being said, when I used it as my primary editor (about 3 years ago) it was pretty buggy and would crash a fair amount.
As a video editor myself who had to do something similar for 2 grandparents in the last 5 years, depending on the volume of images they want to show…. It’s easier to put them in a folder and do a Mac/windows slideshow with Spotify playing. With an actual video file to export a video long enough to go a whole service might be pretty big.
The closest we've seen on windows is Olive editor (open source)---- Okay, so what do you suggest? Editing. Two tools that charge but have very usable free versions. DaVinci Resolve - Needs a strong video card/hardware. Max size (free) is UHD. Full version for $299. Mac/Win/Linux. Full proxy workflow. An excellent tool if your hardware can ...
It include a Color correction deck (with LUT import), a Motion deck, a Speed deck and an Audio deck. Fairlight for audio, Color for Color management or Fusion for special effects are included in Davinci Resolve, sort of Swiss Knife for video editing (macOS, Windows & Linux).