

To exit the preview mode, press the gray circular button in the Photo Booth window’s bottom-center. To review the video you just recorded, click on the thumbnail of it in the filmstrip below the recording window. You can monitor the amount of time recorded in the bottom-left corner of the screen, but your recording time is only limited by the amount of free storage space available on the hard drive or solid-state drive in your Mac. Right-click the thumbnail and choose Export and save it anywhere.

Step 5: Click on the video thumbnail in the filmstrip to preview it once finished. Step 4: Stop recording by press the red button once again. Step 3: Begin recording by pressing the red record button. Step 2: Select the Video Mode by clicking on the photo of the video camera in the lower-left corner of the screen. Recording your video Michael Archambault/Digital Trends Once you are in video mode, the red recording button will show a video camera icon. First, we need to put Photo Booth into video recording mode we can do this by clicking on the video icon in the window’s lower-left corner. Once Photo Booth is open, you will see a preview of what your webcam sees, but it is not recording yet.

Option 3: Open Launchpad by tapping F4 on your keyboard, then scroll through the available apps until you find Photo Booth - click on it once. Option 2: Invoke Spotlight by tapping CMD + Spacebar on your keyboard, type the phrase Photo Booth, and click Enter.

Option 1: Click on the Finder icon (a blue smiling face) in the Dock, navigate to the Applications folder, then double-click on Photo Booth. There are a few ways to accomplish opening an app within MacOS: When ready to proceed, begin by opening the Photo Booth app. All Macs include Photo Booth preinstalled, an application that allows you to take photos and videos using your webcam. Once you have confirmed that your Mac either has a built-in webcam or has an external webcam connected, you can begin the recording process. Recording video on your Mac Michael Archambault/Digital Trends Microsoft Edge opens AI-upscaled video to AMD graphics cards Windows 12: the top features we want to see in the rumored OS
