vit,
TypicalHog,

Kdenlive is the best IMO and pretty easy as well I guess.

mfat,

Shotcut

helenslunch,

The most noob-friendly is going to CapCut, absolutely no question about it. But it’s owned by the CCP so I cannot recommend.

Comradesexual,
@Comradesexual@lemmygrad.ml avatar

It has no Linux client.

helenslunch,

It has no client at all, it runs in the browser.

Certainity45,

Youtube is full of Kdenlive tutorials. Within 1 hour of learning you’ll know the basics use of it. It is easy if you’re willing to start with tutorials since it is different from other video editing softwares.

eugenia,
@eugenia@lemmy.ml avatar

The most noob video editor in PiTiVi, but it’s not as stable as kdenlive (which is much, much more complex, but also more powerful).

RavenofDespair,

i think LosslessCut is good github.com/mifi/lossless-cut

makeasnek, (edited )
@makeasnek@lemmy.ml avatar

Do not use openshot. Really bad bugs that will make it impossible to export your project and make all your time working with it wasted. Use kdenlive instead

lps,

Kdenlive is likely your best bet. Even if u have issues here and there, in the long term you’ll be happy you stuck with it. It has very active development and is shaping up to be the most used foss video editor.

graycube,

Olive seems pretty good but it is really hard to get working.

lemmyreader,

Friend of mine uses Shotcut shotcut.org

helenslunch,

Someone mentioned losslesscut last time this was asked.

ByteWelder,
@ByteWelder@lemmy.ml avatar

I found kdenlive terrible. DaVinci Resolve is much better, but it’s closed source and has some limitations in terms of hardware encoding support (nvidia only).

catloaf,

Also the free version doesn’t let you use all the features, e.g. image noise reduction.

freedumb,

DaVinci is a great piece of software, but is VERY limited on Linux. The lack of mp4 support in the free version is enough to not recommend it for a newbie.

rosemash,

I don’t know, but I wouldn’t recommend OpenShot because it just gets really laggy when adjusting the timeline, and it lacks certain workflow features that you’d just expect mature video editing software to have (like the ability to move or delete keyframes)

possiblylinux127,

Kdenlive

Aradia,
@Aradia@lemmy.ml avatar

You can try with GNU Emacs, looks easy: redirect.invidious.io/watch?v=F6HSf5D6TtA

zongor,
@zongor@hexbear.net avatar

One more way I don’t have to leave Emacs!

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