iPad&iPhone user

4XCamera Maker

Price: Free from fave.co/36zRfDc

- J.R. Bookwalter

For video makers, the highlight of last year’s September Apple keynote was the slick demo of FiLMiC Pro taking advantage of all four iPhone 11 cameras to record multiple angles at the same time. Multi-cam is a great way to quickly create dynamic videos without the time-consuming task of shooting a performanc­e multiple times from different views.

Although FiLMiC Pro’s multi-cam update isn’t available yet – it’s expected soon – there are other

ways to shoot and edit multi-camera video right now, using as many as four iOS devices you already own. Unfortunat­ely, the app in question turns out to be cooler in concept than execution.

Multi-cam shooting

4XCamera Maker is a video app from Roland Corporatio­n, the Japanese company dating back to the early seventies best known for electronic musical instrument­s such as synthesize­rs and drum machines. In recent years, the firm has diversifie­d, porting some of its legendary technology to mobile platforms.

One such app is 4XCamera, which allows musicians on a budget to create split-screen music videos from up to four different performanc­es using audio captured from the built-in mic or other connected hardware. 4XCamera Maker goes one step further by enabling users to wirelessly capture video and

audio from up to four iPhone or iPad devices at once, then assemble them while keeping everything in sync.

Shooting is pretty straightfo­rward thanks to an on-screen launch guide that walks users through the procedure. Place devices at the desired angles, selecting one to act as the master, which is also where you’ll later edit the project. (Tripods or mounts are recommende­d for best results, but you can shoot handheld too, assuming you have enough people to operate those cameras.) Launch the app on each device (it’s free to install and shoot without limitation­s), then tap Link on the master to connect each device. Tap record on the designated master, and all slave devices start recording at the same time.

Prior to shooting, you can take a quick peek at the live image coming into each of your connected devices by tapping Link Preview from the master camera. Sadly, 4XCamera

Maker offers no such preview

during actual recording, but this is still a convenient way to double-check framing before the cameras roll.

If the first attempt wasn’t the award-winning performanc­e you were hoping for, simply tap the TAKE1 button to shoot up to four more takes; you can also delete the current take by tapping the one already used. Once finished, tap the Editor button, which will wirelessly transfer footage saved on the slave devices back to the master, then create a new project with everything synced and ready to edit.

It’s worth noting that you’ll need to enable Wi-Fi, Bluetooth and AirDrop on each device prior to launching 4XCamera Maker. I had no problems connecting, shooting, or transferri­ng footage, and acquiring our test footage worked as expected, although the overall user interface isn’t particular­ly intuitive. Thankfully a help option is just a tap away, complete with pop-up tool tips that explain what each button does.

Chop shop

In terms of actual editing, 4XCamera Maker leaves a lot to be desired. Although you can cut between angles, add transition­s, create split screens, trim the start/end point of an entire project, and add new media from the Photos library, it’s not entirely obvious at first how to do any of these things. Worse still, there’s no built-in tutorial that walks you through the editing process, like there was for shooting.

Aside from the aforementi­oned pop-up tool tips, editors are left to awkwardly tap around the UI before finally stumbling across the Edit Mode button on the left side of the screen, just under the preview window. That’s what enables selecting different angles and choosing where to make cuts or add dissolves, wipes, and split-screen compositio­ns. Swiping through the timeline displays a quick preview of edits, but there are also basic transport controls for play/pause, rewind to the previous edit point, or jump to the beginning of a project.

Of course, since recorded footage is saved directly to the camera roll of each device, you could always import it directly into a more robust editing app such as LumaFusion, but that defeats the purpose of using something like 4XCamera Maker in the first place.

There are a few basic settings for fade in/out options and saving projects, otherwise the only other feature is a vague in-app ‘upgrade’ promising to unlock ‘full editing functional­ity’. There’s no indication what that £3.99 purchase actually gets you (presumably unlimited editing), but we couldn’t tell the difference either way in our tests. (Pro tip: Roland Go: Mixer Pro owners can

skip the upgrade cost by connecting their existing hardware to the app.)

Verdict

4XCamera Maker eases the task of acquiring multicamer­a footage from iOS devices, but clunky editing tools keep this app from reaching its full potential.

System requiremen­ts

• 21.1MB free space

• iOS 10.0 or later

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Have access to four iPhones or iPads? With 4XCamera Maker installed, you can turn them into a multi-camera video recording studio
Have access to four iPhones or iPads? With 4XCamera Maker installed, you can turn them into a multi-camera video recording studio
 ??  ?? 4XCamera Maker offers multicamer­a split-screen editing with transition­s, but the user interface isn’t exactly intuitive
4XCamera Maker offers multicamer­a split-screen editing with transition­s, but the user interface isn’t exactly intuitive
 ??  ?? 4XCamera Maker doesn’t offer much in the way of settings outside of fade in/out control and the ability to save projects
4XCamera Maker doesn’t offer much in the way of settings outside of fade in/out control and the ability to save projects

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