 Hi guys, welcome back to my YouTube channel. This is Daniel Rosal here for this video. I'm going to be looking at CaydenLive's library of video and audio effects, how to find them, how to show what they do, and what there is really. And the point in making this video really is to say or point out that CaydenLive probably has more effects than most people realize or need. So if you're struggling with CaydenLive, you think, well, it can't do that. There are a couple of things relative to DaVinci that it really can do, but those are very occasional things. It's more that, you know, there's a lot more to dig in to it that most users have made use of. So regarding firstly, how to see all the effects. So I have by my effects compositions and effects slash composition stack laid out as tabs in the center of my default view on Cayden. Now, I'd like to draw your attention to the top of that panel. We have a number of buttons and these are very important. By default, it's on main effects and a lot of people don't think, including me, for the first six months of using this program, to see what else there is. The favorite contains your favorite effects list, but there's a video reel button and there is an audio button. And if you click on these buttons, you're gonna get all the effects for video and audio respectively. In other words, the main effects, it's not all the effects in Cayden Live, it's just a mishmash of the best or most used audio and video effects in one tab, but there are much more. So let's start with video effects here. And I'm going to just briefly open each group. And I'm also going to show you how to see what they do. Well, you may as well do that now. To the right, there is show slash hide description of the effects. And if I'm not mistaken, by default, this isn't on. So you need to click it. And now you can see we have a little box here showing the description of each effect. Very, very useful because otherwise, you're kind of flying blind or at least trying to go just based on the description. So I'm gonna quickly read off not every single effect because when you click into every, the all video effects and all audio effects tabs, you really get a sense for how many of these there are. I don't have the number, but it's probably I would reckon at least, perhaps even 100 effects just within the video effects tab. So we have the first and these are all divided into these groups which populate by clicking into them. So the first group in video effects is alpha, mask and key ring. And we have a number of effects there. The only one I've used in this box so far is chroma keying. Very useful if you're doing any work with a green screen. Actually, I take that back. I've also used obscure quite a lot for blurring out portions of a video. Next group we have in video effects is blur and sharpen. Blur is going to be putting blur onto different parts of the video. And the smart blur is quite useful in this for anonymizing or obscuring something that's in motion. Next we have color and image correction. All these tools related to color correcting video. Very, very important, very useful. Three point balance. Another very useful one is lift gamma and gain. So you can play around with these and one other point I've made about effects is that they can be applied on the clip or track level. If you want to apply an effect to a whole track, i.e. to the video track, you drag it on to the magic wand icon on the track. And if you want to put it to just a clip, just put it on a clip. So the lift gamma gain, and if you like any of them, you want to make them your favorites. You right click on an effect and you put it into add to favorites. And then it shows up with a bold font. So these, the color correction, you can knock yourself out playing around with them. I do that from time to time to try and pick up a couple new effects to learn. The main one that I and I think a lot of people use would be lift gamma and gain. You're going to get your three color correction wheels there, but there is clearly more as well. White balance would be quite a useful one as well for editing the white balance in post-processing. And again, if you turn on that show high description button and you click on an effect, you're going to get a description of what it does. Deprecated is going to be ones that have been deprecated, but they're still in the program. They'll skip over those. Generate, I'm going to be honest with you. I have no idea what this does. It just shows you there's so much to learn in Kaden Live. So I'm going to go through them quicker because these are also ones I haven't really used yet. Gain and noise, image, adjustment, motion, fade in, fade out. Well, that's pretty, pretty classic one. Effects on the video master, stylization. These are, you know, kind of a comic-y-like things that you can put on the video and get an embossed effect or a glow effect. Transform, distort, and perspective, very useful. Transform effect I use constantly. You may notice if you've watched any of my other Kaden Live videos, I frequently zoom in, zoom out on parts of the screen. That's all done by key framing, transform. So there's a rule called the 80-20 rule, which I think is that you use 20% of a program's capabilities 80% of the time. Very, very true for me and Kaden. And I'd say most users, probably even a 90-10 rule. 10% of these I use constantly, 90% I haven't touched ever. Utility, RGP Parade, Vectroscope again, never use them. Misk. And again, so I reckon more than 100. There might be even more there. And then VR 360 and 3D. As I learn new effects, if someone hasn't described what they do on YouTube before, I do upload videos because I think there is a lot of capabilities in this program that most people just aren't using. So that's an ongoing thing. So if you do want to catch as I learn more about Kaden Live and I've been using this for two years and I'm still learning stuff almost every day, I'm going to be putting up videos. So that's the video effects. Let's jump now into the audio effects. And we have, let's count one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, 10, 11, 12. 12 different families if you want. So within audio, this is quite big. There is a number of things. And again, you have the same thing as descriptions. Channels would be quite useful for stereo to mono, swap channels, a copy channel to stereo. For instance, if you have a blank track or you're using a mono microphone in a stereo recording or something of that nature, you can impose production, copy tracks. I've done the copy track one before, explained how to do that if you end up with one-sided audio. So you can fill in a blank side from a side that isn't blank. EQ and filter is very, very useful, the EQ effects here. So, you know, this would probably be stuff that you'd ideally do in pre-production or pre-processing rather. In other words, you'd get these set right by monitoring the audio, listening on your headphones. But you can also work on all this stuff in post-production as well. Just to choose a random one for high-pass, apply a high-pass filter with three-point frequency. L-A-D-P-C-A plugins, modulators, pitch and treble, just did a video on this, reverb, echo and delays, stereo and binaural images. This big plugin library from a guy called Steve Harris. Steve Harris is SWH plugins, SWH plugins. And there's a lot of these. You can see really a lot of them, in fact. It's a big library. Tools, volume and dynamics. Now these are the ones I would say that are kind of basic audio use things that most people would have used first. So I've covered normalization before, extremely useful. Likewise, for key frameable volume, if you have background audio, you want it to come in and out more gracefully than you'd get if you're just applying a gain edit. In fact, I should add gain to my favorites, also very useful. You also have a compressor, expander, extremely useful. Limiter, extremely useful. Mute, extremely useful. Fade-in, fade-out, extremely useful. So you get the idea, these are very useful ones. Now to the best of my knowledge, background noise removal, I don't think there is an audio effect. Doing that in cadence, so you have to do the slightly ugly workaround in which you extract audio, open it in audacity and then plop it back in. And then finally, ZAM plugins. And again, I have no idea. You can also search for a plugin by typing in the key, by typing in letters here. The point is between the audio effects and video effects, I would estimate there may be as many as 200 different effects you can apply to your video and audio using Cade and Live. So I definitely recommend populating your project bin with some old footage perhaps and just playing around with the video and audio effects. And seeing what they do, the good thing about both in cadence is that you can apply an effect and it should take effect immediately, both for video and audio. So that's incredibly useful if you are trying to just learn via the hands-on method. Hope that video was useful. If you're interested in Cade and Live and coming to grips with the full capabilities of this video editor. If you wanna get more videos from me about cadence, Linux, tech and other subjects, do please feel free to subscribe to this YouTube channel. Thank you guys for watching.