That is a lot more expensive than KineMaster, but Vimeo Create is a better option for people who want to create branded content and professional videos.
However, you will have to sign up for a Pro plan for that, which costs $24.99/month (a free seven-day trial is available).
Like Viva Video, Vimeo Create allows you to upload stock photos and clips to the videos you are creating. Then, to create a video, select images from your gallery. To get started, sign up with Google or with your email address. Nevertheless, Vimeo is an excellent site for uploading videos for all purposes, whether business or personal, and Vimeo Create is an excellent app you can use for creating videos, whether you intend to publish them publicly on Vimeo or not. Vimeo was actually released around a year before YouTube, but it never gained the popularity and awareness that YouTube managed to get. Most people have heard of YouTube, but not as many people have heard of Vimeo. You can change the size, trim parts of the video out, split the video, speed it up, add text and stickers, add overlays, add filters, add music and sound effects, record your own audio and add it to the video, and even change the overall theme of the video (for example, one theme is Sweet Love, perfect for videos you want to send to your lover). Once you have selected the images and videos, you can start editing your video. You can also upload gifs, stickers, and emojis from Giphy, as well as short clips from Eyeful.Īll of these options allow you to create music videos and slideshows that combine your own images with stickers, gifs, and stock images from around the web. I really liked that in addition to being able to select your own images from your gallery, you can also add stock images from the free library by clicking on the Stock option. To get started, click the big orange Edit button on the home screen of the application. However, like KineMaster, VivaVideo has an excellent free version as well.
It costs only $12.99 and it has a three-day free trial, as opposed to KineMaster’s $22.99/year. VivaVideo is another excellent KineMaster alternative with a cheaper premium option. Instead of creating a slide, just edit the image directly – add filters, change the background, add stickers and effects, and more. You can also edit images directly in the app – InShot is an image editing app as well. You can change the canvas, add music, add text and stickers, change the duration of how long each slide lasts, crop images, change the speed of the video, add filters, change the background, and much more. To get started with InShot, select the images you want to use in your video. Personally, I found it more fun and easier to use, though you may find it to be the other way around. The InShot interface is also a bit different from KineMaster’s. With Inshot, it only costs $2.99/month or $9.99 a year.Īlso, there is the option to pay a one-time fee of $29.99 for a lifetime premium membership, something that KineMaster, unfortunately, does not have. The premium, ad-free version is much cheaper than KineMaster.įor KineMaster, you have to pay $3.99/month or $22.99/year to remove ads and the watermark. That means to me that an Epson user doing the same random sort of photos as me would throw away a lot of unused ink, unless using the 2200/2100 with separate cartridges.InShot is another very popular video editing tool, and I think it’s a great alternative to KineMaster. I use refill kits and always fill them all up together and it's always the photo magenta that wins the race to empty. The Canon transparent cartridges enable a view of status and when the photo magenta is empty, the photo cyan is about half empty and the other colours maybe 20% used.
My Canon S820 experience is that photo magenta empties first.
Has anyone cracked open their "empty" Epson cartridges to see what's still inside? This is an advantage to the user because it lessens problems with air in the system and I presume clogs, and it is good for Epson as you get to throw away ink cartridges before they are really empty. From wide reading it seems the Epson chip-in-cartridge system is quite conservative when it gives the empty warning, one estimate was about 30% remains when the "empty" warning is given.