Splice together your iPhone & iPad videos with slick-looking transitions, add titles, lay down custom soundtracks, and more. Credit: Ben Patterson Your iPhone videos don't have to be boring just because you shot them with iOS. With a little help from Apple's iMovie[1] ($5), you can add quite a bit of polish to your clips, spiffing them up with titles, transitions, slow and fast motion, and even background music. We've collected a few pointers that'll help you make sense of iMovie's overall workflow. We'll also decipher the app's simple (if occasionally head-scratching) interface as well as try out some basic editing tools. With a little practice, you'll be splicing together video like a pro in no time. Getting started The first step to making a movie in iMovie is getting a hang of the overall process—and for that, it's best to understand the three main tabs of the iMovie app: Video, Projects, and Theater Ben Patterson The Projects tab in iMovie is where you'll do most of your editing; the Video tab is where you'll find videos to edit, while Theater is where you'll export your finished movies. The first tab, Video, displays all the video clips stored on your iOS device or in iCloud. Think of the Video tab as your warehouse of raw video clips. The next tab, Projects, is where you'll be doing all the work. To make a movie, you'll need to create a project, stir in some clips from the Video tab, and then start editing. The last tab, Theater, is where your projects will go once they're fully baked. Once you've "exported" a project to the Theater tab (a.k.a., "iMovie Theater"), you'll be able to play your new movie on all your iCloud-connected devices, stream it to an Apple TV, or even upload it to YouTube. Create a new project & pick a theme Now that you have a general idea of how to make a movie in iMovie, go to the Projects tab and tap the big "+" button to create a new project. Ben Patterson Pick a theme for your movie, anything from Modern to CNN iReport—and yes, you can always change the theme later. You'll be presented with two choices: make a movie, or create a trailer. Let's stick with the "Movie" option for now. (Making a trailer involves collecting just right sequence of action shots, profiles, landscapes, two-shots, and more, so it's more complicated than it may seem.)