Skip to main content

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

You don't need editing skills to create polished videos with Adobe Spark

How to Create a Great Recipe Video for Social Media
In the world of social media, video is killing the photo star. According to Adobe, video is becoming the new form of visual communication, and will account for 80 percent of Internet traffic worldwide by 2019. This isn’t surprising to anyone who uses a social network – from Instagram and Snapchat, to Facebook and Twitter. In the past year, the aforementioned networks have stepped up their services to include support for user-generated video content (let’s also not forget about YouTube).

Adobe has been focusing on the social space with its Spark “storytelling” mobile (iOS) and web-based apps that let anyone – whether you’re an “influencer,” small business, or just a casual user – create high-design, impactful graphics for social media, all for free.

“Spark users have already created more than 10 million social posts, web pages, and videos, and those stories are read, watched, and viewed by almost two million people every month,” said Aubrey Cattell, Adobe’s general manager for Spark products, in a blog post.

Recognizing that video is playing a bigger role, Adobe is adding new features to the Spark Video app to make it more in line with video features found in apps like Instagram, Flipagram, or GoPro Quik.

Despite its name, Spark Video didn’t actually support video (the app was formerly known as Adobe Voice). Instead, it allowed users to create short videos using still images and audio, making it more like a slideshow than an actual moving image. With the update, users can now incorporate video clips from their phones, tablets, or computers, along with photos, text, icons, music, and even narration.

If you’ve uploaded videos to Instagram or Snapchat, you basically know the process with Spark Video. You can easily trim a clip, picking a start and end point, or breaking it into different segments. The app also lets you easily align an audio narration to whichever part of the video you want. This is ideal for, say, a cooking demonstration, which Adobe shows in the sample video above. You can also add your own tunes or use one that’s included in the app.

You don’t need an Adobe ID account, but if you have one, you can use that to log in, or just sign up using one of the various login options. Upon launch, you are presented with the Inspiration tab, where you’ll find a quick tutorial (you really don’t need it; it’s that simple) along with videos made by other Spark users. The Inspiration videos give users ideas on how to create videos, whether it’s educational/instructional or a marketing pitch for a business. The My Videos tab is where your creations are found, and they are stored in the cloud (you can also download them to your phone or computer).

To start, simply hit the “plus” icon. You can either start from scratch, or use one of the story templates — like “promote an idea,” “personal growth,” or “teach a lesson” — to help you get going. From there, you can start building your story by creating a slide. You can add video, photos, icons, or text to the slide; edit the attached content (clip, zoom, pan, etc.); set the length of the segment; and hold the microphone button to record narration. Sliding your finger left or pressing the “plus” icon starts a new slide. You can also change the layout for each slide, font/theme, and music. Along the bottom is the clip timeline, which you can preview by pressing the “play” icon.

Once you’re done, you hit the share button, add a title and subtitle, credit info, and category. You can then share to Facebook or Twitter; send via email, text message, or URL; or copy to your phone or computer. All projects are automatically synced to the cloud, so you can start on an iPhone or iPad and finish later on a computer.

If you use a template, the app guides you on what you might want to include on each slide. For example, with “teach a lesson,” the first slide asks what it is you are trying to teach — an overview. The next slide tells you describe the concept, followed by an example, explanation, and so on. The templates are useful for when you want to create a video, but aren’t sure what kind. It also helps you keep your messaging on point.

We created this short clip using videos on our phone, and the process from start to finish took less than 10 minutes. Of course, you could spend more time polishing and perfecting a video it to your liking, but it doesn’t take that much effort to create a quick video that tells a story. Here’s our video:

In terms of quick video creation tools, it’s by far one of the easiest to use (remember, we were using our phone, but it’s even easier if you have a keyboard and mouse). Being that it’s from Adobe, it also has a level of professional polish that you won’t find in many other similar apps. The user interface is elegant, and at no point did we have to reference the tutorial on how to use a function. It’s not a heavy-duty video editor by any means, but for anyone who wants to build a quick video, it does the job. If we have to complain about something, it’s the “Made with Adobe Spark Video” watermark that’s automatically added at the end — and there doesn’t seem to be a way to remove it.

Download for iOS

Check out these other videos, provided by Adobe:

How an Artist Shares Her Inspiration on Social Media
See How a Non-Profit Inspires Action with Motivating Social Video
Thrill-Seeker Takes Spark Video on a Roller Coaster Ride
Awesome Restaurant Marketing Video
Les Shu
Former Digital Trends Contributor
I am formerly a senior editor at Digital Trends. I bring with me more than a decade of tech and lifestyle journalism…
I used two of the year’s oddest tech gadgets so you don’t have to
The open Nokia 5710 XpressAudio and Huawei Watch Buds

If you’re intent on not keeping your true wireless earbuds in a normal charging case, and want to hide them inside a different gadget, now is your time. The Huawei Watch Buds is a smartwatch with a pair of true wireless headphones inside, and the Nokia 5710 XpressAudio is a 4G phone that stores a pair of earbuds in the back.

It’s a bizarre niche that I’m surprised contains two products. I’ve used them, so it's my duty to report that both are a bit silly — and I don’t want to use any more of them, thank you very much. However, for the few people out there thinking they want to buy one, this is what they're like. For everyone else, you get to marvel at two of the oddest tech products seen in a while.
Phone or smartwatch?

Read more
Don’t watch this YouTube video if you have a Pixel 7
Someone holding the Google Pixel 7 Pro.

Reports of another "cursed" piece of content have been making the internet rounds as a video on YouTube has been causing Pixel devices to crash. The video, a clip from the 1979 movie Alien, seems to cause Pixel 7, Pixel 7 Pro, and some Pixel 6 and Pixel 6a smartphones to instantly reboot without warning.

As first reported on Reddit and spotted by Mishaal Rahman, the video will begin to play for only a second or two and then instantly reboot the Pixel 7 it's being played on. Digital Trends can confirm the bug to be active and working, too, with the video instantly rebooting a Pixel 7 Pro we tested it on.

Read more
Forget Dall-E, you can sign up to create AI-generated videos now
A frame from an AI-generated video in claymation style.

Dall-E, ChatGPT, and other AI-generation technologies continue to amaze us. Still, AI image-generation tools like Midjourney might seem boring once you see the new, AI-powered video-generation abilities that will soon be available to us all.

Runway provides an advanced online video editor that offers many of the same features as a desktop app. The company has distinguished its service from others, however, by pioneering the use of AI tools that help with various time-consuming video chores, such as masking out the background.

Read more