 This video is part of a series chart. Check out the link in the description for the full playlist or at the end of this video. And today we're gonna be working with, again, Blender 2.78a. And today I'm gonna show you how to render out your videos. We've looked at how to edit videos, basically. So how do you render them out to a video that you can upload to YouTube or Daily Motion or archive.org. Let's go into our video editor here and I'm just gonna real quick create a little project. I'm gonna do stuff that we've already learned in other videos, so nothing new. I'm gonna choose two of my videos here. I'm going to grab these and move them up like that. I'm going to fade these videos just so we have something to render out. Crossfade, so now I can look here at home. And you can see me, see how it fades from one video to the other. I'm going to add in a color clip and I'm going to fade that. Add a crossfade. I'm gonna select my color there and I'm just gonna shift D to clone it, duplicate it, just like other parts of Blender, select this video, shift select that video. Add and I'm gonna say cross. And then I'm gonna set my video length to here, which is 225 frames. Otherwise it would render a lot of black at the end of this video we don't need. So there is my project. I just did and we have the audio playing here. There we go. So that's the short little video clip. Now we need to render it out. I'm gonna use this little window up here. I'm gonna change it to be our properties window, which is the same window you were probably seeing if you worked in the Blender 3D view. And by default it's set to 1080p. Let's go ahead and, but it's set to 50%. We wanna render out at full resolution since my videos are 1080p, we're rendering out 1080p. The frame rate has already been set to the same frame rate that my video clips were when I imported them, which in this case is 29.97 frames per second. Now let's, by default it's set to save as a still image. We wanna change it to a video. You have all these different movie options. I'm just gonna choose Xvid and under encoding I'm gonna say preset Xvid. And you have option to change here, the main thing you probably wanna change in here is probably your bit rate if you want something a little higher than 6,000. I usually go for 8,000, but I'm just gonna leave it at 6,000 now since this is just a test render. If you were to render it out now, well let's give it a name. I'm gonna save it to my temp folder, I'll just call it my video. And Xvitter.avi, if I don't put the .avi, Blender will automatically put it along with the frame start to finish. So I'm starting at frame one here going to frame 225. So it'll save it as my video underscore one underscore 225.avi, if I don't put anything. If I put the .avi, it won't add anything to it, it will just name it that. So something to think about. And then down here, if we want the audio to render, we have to select an audio format. I'll just choose MP3. Again you can change the bit rates and volume if you wanted. That's pretty much it. At this point we curl them up here and click animate and it will start rendering out our video. We're getting, you know, doesn't say how many frames a second, but saying each frame is rendering in .02 seconds retrain. That's it, our little clip is done. And then there, I usually use MPV or MPlayer to play the video, but Blender actually has a built-in player that I never really use. I hear we have control F11. That was pretty much it. The quality was a little low again. I probably would turn up the bit rate on that a little bit. But other than that, that is how you render out your videos. I do thank you for watching. As always please visit filmsbychris.com. That's Chris with the K. There's a link in the description. And there you can also go to my support section where you can support me through PayPal or Patreon at patreon.com forward slash milx1000. Please be sure to like, share, subscribe, comment. And as always, have a great day.