
Producing sex and fetish videos is an amazing way to boost income significantly, and it’s also a wicked way to get your camgirl name and website URL out there, as most clips sites permit watermarking.
In short, if you’re a Discord cam girl and not making videos, you’re not only leaving a lot of money on the table, but you’re also making the task of self-promotion significantly more difficult.
In order to create videos all you need is some creativity, proper lighting and a quality webcam- no special camera required. If you have the tools to perform live shows you have everything you need to create amazing videos that will make you passive income over time, immediate income with each new video published, and facilitate new cam guys finding you as well as I find there tends to be quite a cross-over between these sets of clients. Your cam clients will purchase your videos, your videos published on clips sites will bring you new cam clients, it’s a beautiful symbiosis. 🙂
My Picks for Top Free Video Recording Software
OBS (my personal favorite)
Screenify
OBS is a bit daunting to set up, but once you do it’s a cam girl’s best friend. Below I’ve composed a set-up manual that will make the process the breeze (don’t be like me and spend an hour cursing at your computer and messing things up before reading a guide…any guide lol).
My Picks for Best Free Video Editing Software
Capcut (my personal favorite)
Kden
ShotCut
Capcut is a fairly simple video editing program to use, on both phone and laptop, but below I’ll explore some of my favorite features of it, as well as a basic guide for using the many tools the program offers.
Top Paid Video Software
DaVinci Resolve
Adobe Premier Pro
Final Cut Pro (Mac only)
Filmora
I haven’t used any of the above paid programs myself, as I find that CapCut allows me to do everything I want to do, including special effects, on the free version of that program, but if I were to pull out my credit card I’d go for DaVinci Resolve. Every ‘capital P’ professional video producer I know uses it, and the reviews are glowing.
Recording Video With OBS
As I wrote above, OBS can be daunting on first encounter, but it’s seriously worth the effort doing so. With this guide below you can be up and running and ready to shoot without hassle. OBS creates clear, high quality footage straight out of the box, but if you want to get fancy you can also avail yourself of filters and overlays (eg watermarks) that can also be used when streaming video. In sum it’s a PITA program, and I love it so. So here goes…
Download and open OBS.
In the bottom-left corner you’ll see a box with a + sign. This is the ‘Scenes’ area.
Sometimes, for some unknown reason, a fresh install of OBS will already have a scene. If there’s already a scene, awesome and you can use it. If there’s nothing there, click + and give it a title like ‘Main Scene’ or whatever you want
Adding Video Source
To add your webcam, in the bottom left switch to ‘Sources’ and click +. From the pop up select ‘Video Capture Device’. Select your video capture device (both your webcam and the built in on your laptop should show as option). After selecting your webcam, name it and click ‘OK’
The next step is to add screen capture. You can choose between ‘Display Capture’ or Window Capture. Choose Display Capture and press OK
Once your camera turns on you’ll need to adjust the screen size to fill the entire area of the camera field, just simply drag your mouse to fill in the area and it will stay that way forever more.
Adding Audio Sources
Now it’s time to add in audio. OBS handles audio sources separately so let’s set up both audio/mic and laptop audio
Mic/Voice
In Settings (bottom right of the screen) click on Audio > Mic/Auxiliary Audio and select your microphone
Desktop sound
In Settings > Audio > Desktop Audio > and select your speakers/headphones
You will see the meters bouncing in the Audio Mixer if sound is detected.
Output settings
The next vital step is configuring Output settings.
In Settings click on Output > Streaming
Set the following:
Encoder
If you have an NVIDIA GPU: choose NVENC
If AMD: choose H.264/AVC Encoder (AMD Advanced Media Framework)
If Intel: choose Intel QSV
If your system is older: choose x264 (CPU-based encoding)
Rate Control
Select CBR
Bitrate
3000–4500 kbps for 720p streaming
or
4500–6500 kbps for 1080p streaming (most sites cap at 6000)
Keyframe Interval
Set 2
Preset
NVENC: Quality
x264: veryfast (best balance)
Hit Apply.
Video Settings
Now it’s time to set up Video Settings (Resolution + FPS)
In Settings > Video set your:
Base (Canvas) Resolution: your monitor’s resolution (usually 1920×1080)
Output (Scaled) Resolution:
choose 1280Ă—720 or 1920Ă—1080 depending on your internet & bitrate
Downscale Filter: Bicubic (good quality, fast)
FPS: 30 or 60 depending on your hardware & target platform
Test Everything Before Going Live
Back in the main OBS window:
Make sure at least one video source is visible in the preview
Audio meters should be moving
No red or yellow warnings at bottom right
And that’s it lol. You’re done! Do a quick test by pressing the ‘Start Recording’ button, record a short clip of your fine self with a self-satisfied smile and patting yourself on the back for getting through all that and then press ‘Stop Recording’. There’s no option on OBS to select where recorded videos are saved to, so make sure that the recording appears saved in your laptop Videos folder (it should be saved there automatically).
Editing Videos with CapCut
While CapCut has a paid upgrade to use the full range of features (including the automatic ‘TikTok’ video maker that scales your vids to the dimensions of that platform), the free version is amazing for more-than basic video editing. Below I’ll run through how to use the basics, and from there you can explore to your hearts content.
Import Your Footage
Open CapCut > New Project
Select videos, photos, or audio from your device, then drag the file down to the timeline.
Trim away dead space (if any) immediately so you’re working with clean clips
Cutting & Trimming
Tap or click a clip > Split to cut it
Drag the clip edges to trim
Use Delete to remove unwanted sections
Reordering
Long‑press or use your mouse to drag a clip to a new position
Speed Control
Select clip > Speed
Normal for smooth speed changes
Curve for stylized ramps (great for fantasy effects)
Enhance the Visuals
Adjustments
Brightness, contrast, saturation, sharpen, retouching
Save your favorite look as a preset for consistent branding
Filters & LUTs
Apply filters for mood
Use Color Match to unify clips shot in different lighting
Effects
Video Effects: motion blur, glow, distortion
Body Effects: tracking-based effects
Overlay Effects: sparks, particles, magic glows (perfect for fantasy themes)
Add Music if Desired
Import your own or use CapCut’s library
Adjust volume so it doesn’t overpower dialogue
Voiceovers
Tap or click Audio > Voiceover
Record directly or import pre‑recorded narration
Sound Design
Add whooshes, hits, ambience
Use Noise Reduction to clean up raw audio
Use Auto Captions for accessibility and engagement
Overlays & Multi‑Layer Editing
Adding Overlays
Tap or click Overlay > Add Overlay
Great for: logos, watermarks, reaction layers, magic effects or animated elements
Green Screen
Add overlay > Chroma Key
Select the green and adjust Strength and Shadow
Blend Modes
Use Overlay, Screen, Multiply, etc. to merge effects with your footage
Text & Titles
Tap or click Text > Add Text
Customize font, color, stroke, shadow
Use Text Templates for quick stylized titles
Add Typewriter or Fade animations for polish
Transitions
Tap or click the white box between clips
Choose transitions like Cross Dissolve, Zoom, Spin, Glitch
Keep transitions subtle unless you’re intentionally going stylized
Advanced Tools (Worth Learning)
Masking: cut shapes into clips for reveals or split‑screen
Keyframes: animate position, scale, opacity, effects
Stabilization: smooth shaky footage
Motion Tracking: attach text or effects to moving objects
3D Zoom (photos): adds depth and movement
Exporting
Tap or click Export
Recommended settings:
Resolution: 1080p or 4K
FPS: 30 for general content, 60 for action or TikTok
Bitrate: High for crisp detail
Select the desired destination folder for your finished video. If you don’t it will save to some bizarre folder and you’ll either have to resave to a kooky folder like ‘Videos’ or otherwise spend half an hour searching for your damn masterpiece. Don’t ask how I know that 🙂
The Sum Up
I hope this guide is helpful in incorporating videos into your indy cam girl business if you haven’t already. If all this is new to you get started, it’s really worth the work in terms of both the huge income boost and the extra benefits of significant expanse of your self-promotion while you earn.
Good luck out there, and happy camming 🙂