Apple has a new app for the iPhone, in case you havenтАЩt heard. ItтАЩs called Clips, because it creates video clips. Better yet, itтАЩs free on the App Store. 1b6e54
When you open it, youтАЩll be greeted with a square capture screen, looking at you through the front camera. If that reminds you of Snapchat, youтАЩre not alone. It puts recording front and centre, itтАЩs got a few filters, and even a bunch of overlays. Fortunately, the similarities end there.
Ultimately, Clips is a new-age video editor. DonтАЩt let that termтАЩs ageing connotations drive you away; this is not a professionalтАЩs tool by any means. Clips is to Final Cut Pro what your Sunday gully cricket tournament is to the IPL. At the same time, itтАЩs good enough to let you create (somewhat) professional looking content.
The more video-inclined in you are probably thinking: тАЬBut I already have iMovie to fill that niche.тАЭ ThatтАЩs true. For a bit of casual creative fun, iMovie on a Mac has its appeal. On the Facebook feed, if you donтАЩt believe us тАУ AppleтАЩs willing to bet that Clips will find suitable use.
Before you dive in with the new app, hereтАЩs what you should know.
Recording, and customisation
Clips offers three ways of creating video тАУ you can click a picture or capture a video from within the app, or pull in something from your existing iPhone library, aka the Photos app. All three options are located right below the viewfinder. No matter what you pick, itтАЩs reformatted to always fit a square aspect ratio, which is bit of a bummer. The one good thing is that you can manually swipe around with panoramas, and then Clips smooths out the motion later.
Apple has baked in four ways of customising individual clips тАУ тАЬLive TitlesтАЭ, that is text, filters, overlays, emoji, and тАЬpostersтАЭ, which are basically title cards. Filters, overlays, and posters are straight-forward to use. You pick one from the options, drag them around for placement, and can double-tap to edit the text within. Unfortunately, just like Snapchat, the emojis here donтАЩt render in high-res. Unicode, are you listening?

The first of those тАУ Live Titles тАУ is the most interesting aspect, as Clips can transcribe and lay out it on the video, synchronised to your talking speed. You can choose from a variety of options for the textтАЩs appearance, and then you narrate to your iPhone while you hold the record button.
Once youтАЩve done that, Clips will show you how your video looks with the text. You can choose to retain your speech, the text version, or both. Those are good options to have, considering how much video we watch these days tends to be silent video. You can also pause playback at any moment, and double-tap to edit the text if the voice recognition fails.
It doesnтАЩt make for the most intuitive functioning, overall. Clips doesnтАЩt make it clear what button does what тАУ the microphone button doesnтАЩt record audio, itтАЩs meant to mute you instead. Moreover, the transcribed text doesnтАЩt appear until youтАЩre done speaking. And if you forget to choose Live Titles before hitting the record button, you can't convert it to text later. Not cool.
Editing, and sharing
All video clips go into a timeline at the bottom. You can tap on any individual clip to play with its length, mute it, or get rid of it. To reorder the clips, just hold down and drag them left or right. If you import an existing video with audio, and record a voiceover, the mute option is clever enough to recognise the tracks as separate тАУ you can unmute the recorded audio, or the original audio.
Clips also lets you bring in background music to layer over the full video. ThatтАЩs the icon in the top-right. You can either pick from over a dozen soundtracks supplied by Apple, or head into your personal music collection. Apple Music tracks are unfortunately not covered in the latter, which is rather disappointing considering Apple made this app itself.
Once you pick your favoured song, Clips will layer it across your video. It even handles mixing on its own, making sure your narration doesnтАЩt get drowned by the music. The only let down with the audio aspect of Clips is that you can't fine-tune the selection, or alter the volume yourself.
If youтАЩre satisfied with your creation, you just touch Done in the bottom-right of the timeline. When you tap the share button, you can either save the video (in full-HD) to your library, or share it on the social networks you prefer. In addition, thereтАЩs a new iMessage tray above that.
Apple says it uses facial recognition tech to identify people in your videos, and suggest iMessage s accordingly. WeтАЩre not sure how well this works, but it didnтАЩt pick up any of the faces during our initial testing, and reverted to a list of recent s.
Clips is easy enough to play with, and itтАЩs still advanced enough to set itself apart from Snapchat, Boomerang (from Instagram), or FacebookтАЩs new camera. ItтАЩs much closer to what Adobe тАУ the maker of professional video tools тАУ has been trying on phones for some time, first with Premiere Clip, and later with Spark Video.
Adobe being Adobe, both those apps offer much more granular control than Clips. If thatтАЩs more you, check them out if you havenтАЩt already. Live Titles are unique to Clips though, and AppleтАЩs wide influence could act in its favour. Or maybe not, who knows.