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Export individual iMovie MacOS projects in *iMovie* (editable) format including clips, music, etc.

The "Library" scheme really annoys me because it's all eggs in one basket.

1000 projects? All one file. If the library file gets trashed, you're done for.


I'd like to be able to save each individual new Project in a fully independent editable state containing all it's resources and elements - and none of the resources/elements from other projects.


All the export options (iMovie 10.4.1) only produce a .mov file etc.

NO individual FILE with the timeline, titles, transitions, raw clips, source material, backgrounds, custom color etc. on and on.


Let's pretend I wanted to give one iMovie project to someone else to re-edit for me 10 years from now and I don't want to have to give them my entire life's work in one single library file.


Is this possible?

Mac Studio (2023)

Posted on Jul 21, 2024 3:46 PM

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Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Posted on Jul 21, 2024 11:28 PM

Hi,


I agree with MartinR that creating an iMovie library for each project will accomplish your goal. Open iMovie in your master library. Working from within the iMovie app, create a new blank library from the File menu with the same name as the project. In the project browser screen select the project icon by clicking on it. Do a File/Consolidate Project Media. Then move your cursor over the project’s icon to cause a little circle with dots in it to appear to the right of the project’s title. A drop down menu will appear. Select Copy to the newly created project library. Both libraries must be open for the copy option to be available.


To transfer to a 3rd party the new library with the project in it, you can copy the library to a thumb drive, formatted Mac Os Extended (Journaled) or APFS, and then physically transfer the thumb drive. Before copying the new library, select its name in the project’s sidebar and do File/Consolidate library media.


— Rich



9 replies
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Jul 21, 2024 11:28 PM in response to igirl1

Hi,


I agree with MartinR that creating an iMovie library for each project will accomplish your goal. Open iMovie in your master library. Working from within the iMovie app, create a new blank library from the File menu with the same name as the project. In the project browser screen select the project icon by clicking on it. Do a File/Consolidate Project Media. Then move your cursor over the project’s icon to cause a little circle with dots in it to appear to the right of the project’s title. A drop down menu will appear. Select Copy to the newly created project library. Both libraries must be open for the copy option to be available.


To transfer to a 3rd party the new library with the project in it, you can copy the library to a thumb drive, formatted Mac Os Extended (Journaled) or APFS, and then physically transfer the thumb drive. Before copying the new library, select its name in the project’s sidebar and do File/Consolidate library media.


— Rich



Aug 2, 2024 7:01 PM in response to igirl1

Great. Everything worked as it should.


The “no media to consolidate” message didn’t stop you. It means that all media in the library already is consolidated so that you don’t need to do anything further in that regard. Without doing the consolidation procedure you wouldn’t have known that.


It is safest to copy first, rather than move. Then go back and delete the original after you have verified that the copy procedure worked and that the copy is working properly.


—Rich

Jul 21, 2024 7:16 PM in response to MartinR

If you already have multiple projects in a single iMovie library, it will be challenging to unravel them. The only way I can think of is to make a backup copy of your Library, then remove everything from the Library except the clips, timeline & other resources you need for one project. Then save the Library with a unique name. You will then have an iMovie Library containing only that one project.

  • Then for your second project, copy the backup Library you made, giving the copy a unique name. Open that copy in iMovie and do similarly for the second project.
  • Keep doing similarly until you have separated all your projects into different iMovie Libraries
  • If you go this route, make sure to preserve intact the backup copy of your original Library; that's your source for all your projects. Only work on copies of that backup Library. And make sure you only remove items from the Library, not your disk.


And, as a reminder, in addition to the iMovie Library you must preserve all the source clips, audio files, photos and other resources you may have used in the project in order to re-edit later.

Aug 2, 2024 5:19 PM in response to igirl1

Just circling back to this now that I actually tried it.

The process went a little different than described, but the results seemed to have worked. And the steps were simpler.


I got to the Consolidate Media step and got stopped.



But I went to the pop up (3 dots) menu to do the Copy anyway to see what would happen.

Here, I also saw the option to Move - so figured why not? (Both options showed my New library.




Move to (the new) Library seems to have worked perfectly.

Interestingly the Movie I moved didn't disappear from the open library immediately... but it did clear out - after I quit it and re-opened.

The New library (dedicated to just one Movie Project) contained all the sole required elements in the media browser and ran without a hitch.


So the steps to select individual Projects and make them into independent New Library/Projects (while also removing them from the multi-project library) would simply be -

  • File/Open Library/New (library named for your Movie or preference)

....then from the Project browser pop up (3 dots) menu

  • Move to (the new) Library


Done!


Jul 21, 2024 7:27 PM in response to MartinR

Thanks for the idea on this.... yes that could work to unravel things. I'll have to go with the duplicate clean library tact for future projects.


Adobe Lightroom (and others) also have this approach - wanting you to put everything you've ever done in one catalog and then use tagging to keep track of things.

For them - after frequently experiencing corrupt catalogs (lost forever) - I quickly learned to create a new catalog/library with each client project and make zillions of regular backups because even their backups were often corrupt of not opening with newer versions which they change about once a month.

Aug 3, 2024 6:44 AM in response to Rich839

Thanks again. I appreciate the help.

I felt pretty safe doing Move (having already made a backup copy of the library before altering it).


But FWIW I tried the Copy approach also.

After successfully copying to the new library/project - It adds the step of deleting the original project (which yields a pop up - "All the media files in this project will be copied into your library in an event named YourProject").

Then you need to go to the Events and find the event/media files and delete them as well.


Both ways work - but after doing quite a few, the faster/simpler Move hasn't failed me yet!

Export individual iMovie MacOS projects in *iMovie* (editable) format including clips, music, etc.

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