Those will carry over to the DVD project in your DVD authoring program (Toast).Ī brief internet search turned up a link that purports to provide user guides for the various versions of Toast.Ĭan't vouch for the link, not having used it myself. The Mp4 movie is a standalone file that contains all the titles and other editing that you did in the project. That should open a Roxio DVD project where you can add whatever titles and so on that you want. Don't move, delete, or change anything in these project folders or you risk corrupting your iMovie library.Īlthough I have never used Toast, I can surmise that all you need to do is drag the Mp4 movie you created into the download window of Roxio Toast (or follow whatever instructions that Toast provides). However, you cannot play them there because they are not "project" folders but rather folders that contain project data that gets assembled into a playable project when you select the project from within the iMovie 10.1.8 app. You can see a list of your iMovie 10 projects by control clicking on the iMovieLibrary folder contained in your Movies folder, and selecting to Show Package Contents in the drop down menu.
Your iMovie 10.1.8 projects would not show up there, as you have found. I have both iDVD and Roxio Toast, and have at this point used neither. After working long and hard on an iMovie (composed of about 10 sections), I am preparing to begin the process of putting the project on DVD.
Other interesting Mac alternatives to Brasero are Burn (Free, Open Source), Roxio Toast (Paid), SimplyBurns (Free, Open Source) and Disco (Free). Posted: Decem3:36PM in Mac Software edited January 2014.
The iMovie projects folder that you refer to pertains to an older version of iMovie, probably iMovie 9. If that doesnt suit you, our users have ranked more than 50 alternatives to Brasero and eight of them are available for Mac so hopefully you can find a suitable replacement.