How To Edit Your Drone Footage in the DJI Fly App
Good day, folks! Shawn here from Air Photography. Perhaps youโve recently purchased a brand-new drone, such as the DJI Mini 4 Pro, the new DJI Flip, the DJI Neo, or the
Exploring Editing Options
There are many free apps for editing footage that you can download directly to your smart devices, like a tablet or phone. In this video, however, weโll focus on the DJI Fly app.
All the tools you need to edit and share are built right into the Fly app. To begin, Iโll assume all content has been transferred from the drone to your deviceโwhether a smartphone or tablet. If youโre unsure how to do that, I uploaded a video about a week ago explaining how to transfer content from your drone to your device. Iโll include a link to that video in the description below. To start, launch the DJI Fly app; in the bottom left-hand corner, youโll find an icon called โCreateโโthatโs our editor.
Understanding the DJI Fly App Editor
Thatโs where weโll do all our editing. One key thing to noteโbased on Apple devices like iPads and iPhones (Iโm not sure about Android, as Iโm not an Android user)โis that it can only read files stored in the Photos app. So, if your footage is in the Files app, youโll need to transfer it to Photos first. A great feature of the Fly app is that you can edit footage beyond just DJI products. You can edit your drone footage, but also mix in clips captured on an action camera or smartphone. Letโs launch the editing tool. Youโll notice it edits in a vertical format. On a phone, thatโs fine, but on an iPad, youโll need to adjust to editing vertically.
Editing Options: Auto vs. Manual
There are two main editing approaches, which Iโll split into two parts. Auto editing lets the software handle cuts, transitions, and musicโperfect if youโre not into editing and just want a quick, shareable result. Iโll cover auto editing in a separate video, so stay tuned. For this video, weโll focus on traditional timeline editing, giving you full control over everything.
Navigating the Editing Interface
Upon launching, youโll see the main interface. At the top, thereโs โNew Project,โ โOne Tap Edit,โ and a โDraftsโ icon on the right for accessing saved projects. There are also pre-made templates, but weโll stick to timeline editing. Tap โNew Project,โ and youโll see โDJI Album,โ which is content transferred to the Photos app. I currently have three files there. Preview them by tapping the corner icon to scrub through and decide what to include. You can also change albumsโany albums on your device will appear. If youโve got smartphone footage in the main camera roll, the app wonโt read it unless itโs in an album. Create an album, name it whatever you like, and add your clips there.
Building Your Project
Iโll select drone footage and some files for our edit, including one shot on the Action 5 Pro. At the bottom, selected clips appear in the order theyโll be added to the timeline. Adjust their order by pressing, holding, and draggingโeither now or later during editing. Once your footage is selected, hit โNextโ to create the timeline (skip โOne Tap Editโ for now, as thatโs for auto editing). Initially, my video is 27 minutes with raw footage, so weโll trim it downโperhaps to 30 seconds for social media shorts or 2-3 minutes for a dramatic piece for YouTube or Facebook.
Refining Your Timeline
For a visual preview, pinch to zoom in or out on the timeline. Before editing, set your aspect ratio via the top buttonโ16:9 for YouTube or 9:16 for social media. For 9:16, expand the video to fill the frame; for this video, Iโll use 16:9. Adjust clip order by dragging, or hit the plus button to add more footage. Now, use built-in tools to trim, add music, apply effects, and color grade. For the first clipโdrone footage over waterโIโll trim it to under a minute. Cut unwanted sections by splitting and deleting, like the front part and excess after the opening.
Enhancing Your Clips
As you progress, cut where neededโe.g., keeping a drone rise with a boat appearing in the harbor. Use undo/redo if you make a mistake. You can also reverse clips or adjust speed (up to 8x or down to 0.25x). Slowing too much may look odd depending on frame rate, but 4K 60 footage halved looks natural. Variable speed allows speed ramping for dynamic effectsโlike reversing a drone rise to a descent. Trim each clip, monitoring the total length to stay under a minute.
Adding Finishing Touches
After trimming to about a minute from 27, enhance with effects, titles, and color grading. DJIโs auto mode footage often looks great without much grading, especially for beginners. Add music via the โMusicโ tabโmute original audio or blend it for effect. The Fly appโs library offers styles like โCheerfulโ; preview and select one, noting copyright for monetized edits. Add music early to cut with tempo changes for drama. Import royalty-free music under โLocalโ if preferred. For visuals, apply filters (adjustable strength) or manual color tweaks (temperature, highlights, shadows). Glamour effects smooth skin, while Color Recovery revives flat profiles like DLog M. Aqua adjusts underwater footage colors.
Adding Effects and Text
Under โEffects,โ add options like snow, autumn vibes, or falling leaves for flairโdepending on your taste. For text, tap โClick to add text,โ enter a title (e.g., โDrone Videoโ), and tweak font, color, and size with templates. Add stickersโlike a DJI logo or emojisโfor personality.
Exporting and Sharing
Preview your edit, refine as needed, then export. Set resolution (1080p, 2.7K, 4K) and frame rateโIโll use 1080p here. Export time varies (30 seconds to minutes) based on length and resolution. Once saved to the camera roll, share manually or directly via the app to platforms like Facebook or Instagram. Unfinished projects auto-save under โDraftsโ for later editing.
Final Thoughts
Thatโs editing with the DJI Fly appโa powerful, free tool included with your drone. Itโs ideal for transferring and editing footage, especially with devices like the DJI RC2. Hopefully, you found this helpfulโif so, give it a thumbs up! Thanks for watching, and see you in the next one.
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Really well explained Shawn! Thanks for the article. I like to edit on my mac, but when Iโm doing a quick edit on my phone, Dji Fly is the way because it didnโt watermark your video like Capcut.