Final Week for "All About Me - The Video"
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Exporting Your Video - a.k.a "Baking the Cake"
When you have a finished product, polished to the best of your ability in the amount of time you have been given, we have one final step. You collected your primary ingredients from the internet, created some of your own using the built in text tools, and then compiled a "recipe" of how they all should be combined into a single, amazing video. Now it's time to bake that cake and let the rest of the world have a taste!
We will now Export a high definition video to be uploaded to your school YouTube channel. We are going to use the MP4 format of video (called H.264) with a resolution of 1920x1080 at 30 frames per second. Premiere has a preset for YouTube Full HD that sets the data rate to a variable 16 Mbps. This is enough of a data allowance to make a high quality video without forcing YouTube to compress it too much and ruin the quality.
We will now Export a high definition video to be uploaded to your school YouTube channel. We are going to use the MP4 format of video (called H.264) with a resolution of 1920x1080 at 30 frames per second. Premiere has a preset for YouTube Full HD that sets the data rate to a variable 16 Mbps. This is enough of a data allowance to make a high quality video without forcing YouTube to compress it too much and ruin the quality.
The name I used for the file has the current date code, My Favorite Things, my name and (VBR16) to show how much data I allowed it to use... you can copy and paste the title below and change it as needed.
221010 My Favorite Things (draft) - Moshue Hicks (VBR16)
YouTube Upload
Now that we have an actual MP4 video exported , we will upload it to our class YouTube channel so we can include it in our online portfolio. You will need to submit your video to me for review and uploading, so make sure it's free of misspelled words and has all the required elements by having your classmates watch it before I do.
The video below will show you how to upload to your YouTube channel - a good thing to know how to do on a personal channel, even if you don't have one yet. This video is from last year... we'll see if we can get another tutorial recorded by a student in case there are any significant changes. I think you can figure it out though. Remember - it's made for kids!