Wedding videographers, on edit day
Eight hours of recording across three cameras. Two ceremonies, a reception, every speech, the after-party. The deliverable is a three-minute highlight reel and a thirty-minute full cut. You have a week.
The hard part is not the cutting. It’s finding the moments to cut.
Every wedding videographer keeps a mental list of beats they need to land. The first look. The rings. The first kiss. The dad-toast where it gets real. The moment on the dance floor where the bride throws her shoes off. You filmed all of those. The question is which of the 312 clips on your card has the version of each one you want.
Scrubless watches what’s in the frames and what’s in the audio. “The bride hugs her mother.” “The first kiss.” “A toast where the room laughs.” You type the moment, you get back ranked clips, scored by closeness. You click into the one you want and the player jumps.
I talked to a videographer who said the highlight reel wasn’t even the real win. The real win was previewing. She’d send the couple a private folder before the final delivery and let them search it. “Find the part where my grandma is dancing.” That clip ended up in the final cut. The couple felt like they’d been a part of the edit. The relationship became different.
She also told me this is now her honest answer to the drunk-uncle problem. Every wedding has one. You couldn’t tell a couple before that their uncle’s toast wasn’t going to make it in. You can now: here are the four moments Scrubless ranked highest from the speech, none of them are him, you’ll thank me later.
If you’ve ever paid for an assistant to log footage, you can give that part to the tool now. The assistant can do something that requires taste.
Try it on your own video.
Search inside any video in plain English. Free to try, no account needed.
Open Scrubless