 Hey guys, welcome back to my YouTube channel. This is Daniel Rosalha here. I want to do a video regarding how to downscale the resolution of a video using the Cadenlai video editor. I'm using it here on Ubuntu Linux. So something I was doing this morning was I'm working on a video from a conference that I attended a few days ago in Italy. This is a video of one of the panels that I received from the conference organizers and pulling out some clips for YouTube and I'm also going to put the whole video up. Now you can see what resolution you're working with usually by looking at the top of Cadenlai. You can see here it says 4K UHD 2160p. So the frame rate and the resolution is going to be automatically picked up by Cadenlai when you import your video clips. Now sometimes it just doesn't make sense to have 4K, you know, if this video is being shown distributed for viewing at a on a huge conference screen, that might make sense for putting something on YouTube. 4K is going to involve a large storage overhead and for, you know, a basic talking head video like this where it's two people talking one another, I think 1080p is better. It's going to take up less space and more importantly it's going to streamline my workflow process a lot. It's going to be a lot quicker to get that up on the internet with my bandwidth. So how do you do that? So when when you get to the rendering stage in Cadenlai, so you choose firstly your rendering profile, your usual quality settings, full project, etc. And then there's a little tick box here and it says rescale and it's actually by default selected for full HD, which is of course 1920 pixels across and 1080 pixels up. But the nice thing here is that you can choose it, you can choose to lock the aspect ratio. So for example, if I wanted to render this out in 720, it would pick that out. I'm not sure that it's whether that was locked or unlocked. But in any case, if you're working with 4K, and you want to get it to 1080p, aka FHD, full HD, this is probably the most common use that people will be making. So by default, this is unticked just like it is now. So what you want to do is tick on rescale, get the resolution that you want, you can see they're locked together now. And then when you render that video, it'll be in 1080p rather than 4K. And therefore it'll be much less space to store and quicker also to get up to the internet. Hope that video is useful. If you want to get more videos from me, please subscribe to this YouTube channel.