every time you save a project and open it again to continue working on it, the clarity of the picture decreases. for the best quality, close the program and reopen it as few times as possible. try to save it frequently, but don't close the project.
Windows Movie Maker does not have an integrated photo editing feature. Whatever way the file is imported into the program is the way it will be displayed.
don't worry this will happen but when you save it it will return to normal quality
They shouldn't be blurry. There is either something wrong with your program, or the file you are importing and using is corrupt.
You can't do that in Windows Movie Maker, Live Movie Maker or any other version.
Sorry. You can't do that on Windows Live Movie Maker.
You can use both video and photographs from a camcorder on Windows Movie Maker.
using windows movie maker
it works for any camera just save your videos/pictures on to your documents and just upload to the WINDOWS MOVIE MAKER, it is easy.
The way I know how to do it is... You have to have windows and you need Windows Movie Maker. You find some pictures and save them in a folder. You open Windows movie maker and import the pictures. You can add titles to them and then you can mess around with the sound and stuff.
You have to really look at the Time-line when adding pictures to a project in Windows Movie Maker. Something is not exact if your video is longer than the original project.
Yes, you can.I have both the 2.6 version of Windows Movie Maker and Windows Live Movie Maker.
Yes.You can import the video back into Windows Movie Maker again (as long as it is in the correct format for the program) and extract pictures from frames using the "Take Picture from Preview"feature (only available on v2.6 version).Unfortunately, WLMM (Windows Live Movie Maker) does not have this feature.
Yes, you can.I have both the 2.6 version of Windows Movie Maker and Windows Live Movie Maker.
Yes windows movie maker, imovie. ("'\(o.o)/"')
Effects in Windows Movie Maker include transitions between video clips or pictures, film effects for separate clips, overlays, credits, subtitles, and captions.