If anybody wants to apply these effects to multiple clips and doesn't want to deal with manually adding it to each, you can just add them to an adjustment layer and put it above your clips.
Brilliant. You spoke and moved slowly enough for a newbie to keep up without having to pause the video too often. Everything was easy to follow. Thank-you.
Thanks very very much !! Finally found someone that will explaine me in an easy tempo what to do. Most guys rattle like a machinegun so I can't follow it.
Thanks, a really useful tutorial. Love the simple step-by-step instructions. It occurred to me that scratches on the emulsion of the (positive) print would be white. Dust is most pronounced at the start and end of reels where the heads and tails have picked up crud from the projection room, so keyframes would allow changes in the intensity of the effects over time. The camera shake fx could be used to introduce some frame judder, and finally a pair of scratchy cue dots top right at the end of the "reel" would be the icing. Plenty to play with!
Thank you so much for a great video, specially for arrows pointing out the adjustments. It is so helpful, that I don’t need to stop the video and rewind to see where did you click. Thank you so much.
perfect for a project I am working on filming a 1920's Art Deco theatre which has been restored, I will start with this effect and transition into full 4k during my FPV fly through.
I usually never comment on a great video, but this is not only an awesome tutorial but Resolve is pretty amazing! Thank You! You have a nice voice as well.
Thank you so much for the feedback, @Andri Leonardo. Glad to hear that the tutorial was easy to follow and hope that your DaVinci Resolve work is going well.
You stay safe too! Before I upload any video and I am post processing in Davinci I go through dozens of the luts I have in Davinci and all the film effects I have in BCC in Davinci. I love looking at each of the effects on my video. Thats the funnest part of working in Davinci. Funny how much I love the Old Film effect. They must of known what looks good back in the old film days haha :) 😉👍🌹
There's definitely a lot to be appreciated in this classic look. I think that the black and white look in general provides a lot of surrealism and atmosphere that you wouldn't get with film in colour. I always look forward to experimenting with more effects in the software.
You're very welcome, @Middle of Knowhere. Those effects are available there indeed. I've subbed to you also to support your computing channel. All the best.
It is always great coming across useful information that doesn't include the fluff. your presentation of your process was to the point , simplified and more importantly effective to what i need to do. New subscriber here! almost 5k views and no thumbs dumb. Even the haters couldn't hate on this. Great Job.
Brilliant - one of the best tutorials out there - one thing that is great about manipulating image this way is you get to understand tonal values, an important step in understanding colors - personally I love old BW - there is just something about inky deep blacks and spectral whites
Thanks for this. I'm still relatively new to Davinci so I had no clue on how to do this. I'm currently using version 1.18.5 and it still works exactly as explained in the video. Did I do this for a 2 second gag? Absolutely.
You're very welcome, @MegaMGstudios. I'm glad that this is still helpful to other users of the software. I did try 18.5 recently but my computer kept crashing when I opened Fusion! I'll see how I get on with 18.6! 🙏
Hi @Open Your Eyes and See the World. You're welcome and thank you for your feedback. At present, the only filter available in the free version of DR that I can find in the Effects (previously Effects Library) menu apart from the Film Damage filter used in this tutorial is the Noise Gradient under Generators.
Wonderful tutorial, and easy to follow along with! One question though - creating this effect involves a lot of steps. Is there a way to save the final effect outcome so that it can be applied quickly to any other clip?
Hi @Jan Schmitz. Thank you so much for your kind words. I'm not sure if you've seen one of these earlier tutorials of mine? I hope that this helps you to save your Fusion work for future use: th-cam.com/video/9XZYK1gbqeU/w-d-xo.html
Being a newb to all this, can the changes affected here be then save and used as a 'filter' in the future? I would not want to have to set it all up every time.
Hi @Danthehorse . It's possible if you add the Film Damage and Glow tools via the DaVinci Resolve Fusion application instead of in the Edit tab's Effects Library. You will need to add a Colour Compressor tool (SHIFT + SPACE), and change Compress Saturation to 1.0 to turn the clip to black and white also. Once you have adjusted your tool variables, you can follow the instructions in a tutorial that I made before in order to save these settings for another time. The link to the tutorial is below. Hope it helps. th-cam.com/video/9XZYK1gbqeU/w-d-xo.html
@@C0ntiChannel Thank you! My channel is very small and very niche. Not a lot of sims fans and out of those, not many machinima fans! It’s never going to be big but it’s a hobby I enjoy. I am trying to learn to do music videos using sims though so your channel has a lot of effects tutorials that will work well for me. Thanks 😊
@ZeeGee. You're welcome. I haven't played the game for a number of years but I really enjoyed the original Sims and its expansion packs back in the day and I still get nostalgic when I hear Jerry Martin's lovely soundtrack. I'm happy to hear that my tutorials are useful to you and hope that more followers of the video game series will discover your work soon. Stay safe.
Thanks. I followed this but when I preview the clips they are frozen with the effects working, there is just no video motion on the clips. What am I doing wrong?
Hi @Dad Is Phat. I have similar issues with previewing but once these clips are rendered and out of DaVinci Resolve as a video clip, they should play smoothly in your media player software. In the meantime, in the Delivery window, you could try rendering individual clips to see how the effects look before rendering your whole project. Hope that helps.
Hi @L0rdCROISSANT. You can add a Solid Color edit from the Generators menu under Effects in your Edit window. Place the Solid Color edit in a video track above the one containing your video clip. Then under Inspector and Generator, choose a brown colour shade, e.g. #7d532a, and then under Settings and Composite, change Composite Mode to 'Color' so that this is applied to your video. You also won't have to reduce Saturation in the Color area from 50 to 0 as shown at 0.40 in this video. Hope that this helps.
@@C0ntiChannel first I want to say thank you for responding... majority don't believe in taking the time hahaha sigh. will give this a try too thanks :)
Hi @dobkun. If you've already added the OpenFX filters and applied appearance settings with these to a clip on one layer, you can right-click on this and select Copy. Right-click on a clip on a separate layer, choose Paste Attributes (ALT/OPTION + V), and tick the Plugins box under the Video Attributes header before selecting Apply. Hope that helps.
Yes. But what about actual film damage? You are replicating film-negative damage. Film-positive damage should show up as white, not black. Any telecine transfer of damaged film should also have 1. Hairs (preferably eyelash ones) jumping up and down on the side of the frame, 2. Glue or other plicemarks on splices, 3. Minor or major sprockethole damage (image jumping up and down erratically). Optionally: 4. Burn-in marks (preferably near splices). Your tutorial seems like a millennial's expectation of what old film looks like, not like someone familiar with old film trying to re-create the actual experience?
If anybody wants to apply these effects to multiple clips and doesn't want to deal with manually adding it to each, you can just add them to an adjustment layer and put it above your clips.
Wery well produced: informative and strickt to the point without any unnecessary hyped-up narration or wanna-be comedic moments. Thumbs up from me!
Many thanks for your kind words, @whiterottenrabbit.
Brilliant. You spoke and moved slowly enough for a newbie to keep up without having to pause the video too often. Everything was easy to follow. Thank-you.
Thank you so much for your feedback and kind words, @khanadda222!
Very thorough and to the point! Thanks for making this, and appreciate your effort in coming up with this proper tip.
You're welcome and thank you for your kind words, @PatVersusTheWorld.
This is one of the easiest to follow, and most detailed tutorials I have seen! Well done! It is a huge service!
Many thanks for your kind words, @Gwen Juvenal.
Thanks very very much !! Finally found someone that will explaine me in an easy tempo what to do. Most guys rattle like a machinegun so I can't follow it.
Hi @Vrijbuiter Buiter. You're very welcome. Glad that the tutorial was helpful to you.
Thanks, a really useful tutorial. Love the simple step-by-step instructions. It occurred to me that scratches on the emulsion of the (positive) print would be white. Dust is most pronounced at the start and end of reels where the heads and tails have picked up crud from the projection room, so keyframes would allow changes in the intensity of the effects over time. The camera shake fx could be used to introduce some frame judder, and finally a pair of scratchy cue dots top right at the end of the "reel" would be the icing. Plenty to play with!
Thank you very much for your feedback, @Jon Oates. Glad that you found many technical areas of the software to experiment and have fun with.
Awesome Tutorial! FInally some old content that is still worth to be kept on TH-cam 😀Thank youuuuu!!!
You're very welcome, @KalleTheodor. I'm very glad that people still find this tutorial helpful.
Thank you so much for a great video, specially for arrows pointing out the adjustments. It is so helpful, that I don’t need to stop the video and rewind to see where did you click. Thank you so much.
Thank you so much for your kind words, @Unwind. Best wishes for 2023.
Thank you so much! This is such a good video! Well conducted and simple, and was exactly what I needed. Thank you!
You're welcome, @somnivacie. Thank you so much for your kind words.
perfect for a project I am working on filming a 1920's Art Deco theatre which has been restored, I will start with this effect and transition into full 4k during my FPV fly through.
Many thanks for your kind words, @Gimbalair. Best of luck with your project.
I usually never comment on a great video, but this is not only an awesome tutorial but Resolve is pretty amazing! Thank You! You have a nice voice as well.
Many thanks for your kind words, @Eric Williams. Glad that you're enjoying working in DaVinci Resolve.
Very nice tutorial! You were explaining so clear and easy, that i only had to hear what you were telling while doing it :D
Thank you so much for your feedback, @eric squees. I've glad that the tutorial helped you with your DaVinci Resolve work. Stay safe.
@@C0ntiChannel stay save too!
Thank you! You have a great way of explaining things; makes everything so easy :-)
Thank you so much for the feedback, @Andri Leonardo. Glad to hear that the tutorial was easy to follow and hope that your DaVinci Resolve work is going well.
exactly what i was looking for, thanx for the great tutorial 🙂
Many thanks for your kind words, @lenny_Videos. You're very welcome.
very professional and very good guide thank you my friend
You're most welcome, @nezoskiXOU.
Very good describing. Thank u
You're very welcome, @KinzlyDhanushka. I'm very glad that this older tutorial is still helpful.
I AM LOVING THIS EFFECT! :D producing a video right now and so wanted to add this effect in it and here it is, awesome
Many thanks for commenting, @L0rdCROISSANT. Glad that you found the effect that you wanted.
Thank You so much! I love love love the old film effect! :)
Thank you so much for the comment, @IcloneFun. I hope that you get to incorporate some classical effects in your videos. Stay safe.
You stay safe too! Before I upload any video and I am post processing in Davinci I go through dozens of the luts I have in Davinci and all the film effects I have in BCC in Davinci. I love looking at each of the effects on my video. Thats the funnest part of working in Davinci. Funny how much I love the Old Film effect. They must of known what looks good back in the old film days haha :) 😉👍🌹
There's definitely a lot to be appreciated in this classic look. I think that the black and white look in general provides a lot of surrealism and atmosphere that you wouldn't get with film in colour. I always look forward to experimenting with more effects in the software.
Me too. As I mentioned before I upload any video to youtube I go through so many luts and coloring effects in Davinci. So much FUN :) 😊🌼
Thanks so much, easy to follow and great explanations of each option. This effect works well :)
You're very welcome, @Mark Minchington. Thank you so much for commenting.
Very straightforward, thank you!
You're very welcome, @Sean081799.
Fantastic instructions. Clear and concise. Many thanks 👌👌
You're welcome. I appreciate your kind words, @captainmeck2752.
Thank you for this, it's been really helpful for me! Extra thanks for you showing all the steps so clearly! 👍
You're very welcome, @Ann Elving. I'm glad that this tutorial helped you.
This video is amazing! Thank you so much for breaking it down step by step. Keep up the great work :)
You're very welcome, @The Goodfella. Thank you for commenting and hope that you continue finding my videos useful.
This is exactly what I need for a skit project I want to do. Well done. Subbed! I hope these effects are available in the free version.
You're very welcome, @Middle of Knowhere. Those effects are available there indeed. I've subbed to you also to support your computing channel. All the best.
It is always great coming across useful information that doesn't include the fluff. your presentation of your process was to the point , simplified and more importantly effective to what i need to do. New subscriber here! almost 5k views and no thumbs dumb. Even the haters couldn't hate on this. Great Job.
Many thanks for your kind words, @JCINE Williams. I've subscribed to you also and wish you all the best with your video editing. Stay safe.
@@C0ntiChannel really appreciate it 🙏🏿
I used this effect in my latest video. 😁 Thanks a lot! I kept it a little toned down so that it is not distracting.
Hi @A S. Great to hear that this technique was useful to you. I gave your recent upload a like. Keep up the good work.
@@C0ntiChannel Thanks a bunch!
Oh this was fantastic, just what I needed, thanks!
You're most welcome, @jonathan.gasser. Thank you for your nice comment.
Brilliant - one of the best tutorials out there - one thing that is great about manipulating image this way is you get to understand tonal values, an important step in understanding colors - personally I love old BW - there is just something about inky deep blacks and spectral whites
Thank you so much for your kind words, @Vaxxed Films.
Great tutorial thanks , no BS just straight to the point and it works.
Many thanks for your feedback, @Phillip Hattingh. You're welcome. 👍🏻
This was exactly what I needed and explained so well! Thank you!
You're very welcome, @Seductive Alien Animations. Glad that you found what you were looking for.
Absolutely incredible tutorial!
Many thanks for your kind words, @Ryan Byhre.
Awesome! Thanks.
You're very welcome, @indyme2.
Great video
Many thanks, @DARK S.
Thanks for this. I'm still relatively new to Davinci so I had no clue on how to do this. I'm currently using version 1.18.5 and it still works exactly as explained in the video.
Did I do this for a 2 second gag? Absolutely.
You're very welcome, @MegaMGstudios. I'm glad that this is still helpful to other users of the software. I did try 18.5 recently but my computer kept crashing when I opened Fusion! I'll see how I get on with 18.6! 🙏
Very nice. Exactly what I was looking for. Thank you!
You're welcome, @deutscheverkehrswacht.
Perfectly explained, Thank You
You're very welcome, @saajuenter. Thank you for your kind words.
Exactly what I was looking for, thank you so much!
You're very welcome, @bella. Glad that this tutorial was what you were looking for.
Thanks for this tutorial! Very helpfull to me it has been.🙂
You're very welcome, @StudioSam!
Simply the best ❤❤
I really appreciate you supporting my channel, @RoniD-zp2tm. I hope that you continue finding my videos helpful.
Great tutorial, thank you!
You're very welcome, @Julio Caliman. Keep safe!
Awesome thank you how can I add easily grain or noise without buying Resolve?
Hi @Open Your Eyes and See the World. You're welcome and thank you for your feedback. At present, the only filter available in the free version of DR that I can find in the Effects (previously Effects Library) menu apart from the Film Damage filter used in this tutorial is the Noise Gradient under Generators.
Top Notch tutorial, I'm using this soon :)
Many thanks for your kind words, @Mike Van Rose.
Great tutorial!
Thank you very much for your kind words, @rickpostfilm.
Thank you. Very easily explained. Very useful :)
You're welcome, @Robert De Piano. Glad that you found the tutorial useful.
Wonderful tutorial, and easy to follow along with! One question though - creating this effect involves a lot of steps. Is there a way to save the final effect outcome so that it can be applied quickly to any other clip?
Hi @Jan Schmitz. Thank you so much for your kind words. I'm not sure if you've seen one of these earlier tutorials of mine? I hope that this helps you to save your Fusion work for future use:
th-cam.com/video/9XZYK1gbqeU/w-d-xo.html
Being a newb to all this, can the changes affected here be then save and used as a 'filter' in the future? I would not want to have to set it all up every time.
Hi @Danthehorse . It's possible if you add the Film Damage and Glow tools via the DaVinci Resolve Fusion application instead of in the Edit tab's Effects Library. You will need to add a Colour Compressor tool (SHIFT + SPACE), and change Compress Saturation to 1.0 to turn the clip to black and white also. Once you have adjusted your tool variables, you can follow the instructions in a tutorial that I made before in order to save these settings for another time. The link to the tutorial is below. Hope it helps.
th-cam.com/video/9XZYK1gbqeU/w-d-xo.html
@@C0ntiChannel Thanks so much for your help :)
You're very welcome!
Loving all your tips! Subscribed.
Hi @ZeeGee. I'm glad to hear that my tutorials are helpful to you. I will subscribe to you also. All the best with your channel.
@@C0ntiChannel Thank you! My channel is very small and very niche. Not a lot of sims fans and out of those, not many machinima fans! It’s never going to be big but it’s a hobby I enjoy. I am trying to learn to do music videos using sims though so your channel has a lot of effects tutorials that will work well for me. Thanks 😊
@ZeeGee. You're welcome. I haven't played the game for a number of years but I really enjoyed the original Sims and its expansion packs back in the day and I still get nostalgic when I hear Jerry Martin's lovely soundtrack. I'm happy to hear that my tutorials are useful to you and hope that more followers of the video game series will discover your work soon. Stay safe.
That's is brilliant. Thank you!
Hi @A S. You're very welcome. Thank you for your kind words as always.
Great video man!!!
Many thanks for your comment, @Vito McCartney.
Excellent video , very useful, thanks
You're very welcome, @Wellness Mantra by Gunjan. Glad that you are finding more of my videos useful! Stay safe.
thanks man, very useful!
You're most welcome, @maciejtanski5214!
is film damage supposed to slow playback into a crawl?
really great thank you!
You're very welcome, @Dilberry Plays. Thank you for commenting.
Will this work in DaVinci Resolve 15 ?
Thanks. I followed this but when I preview the clips they are frozen with the effects working, there is just no video motion on the clips. What am I doing wrong?
Hi @Dad Is Phat. I have similar issues with previewing but once these clips are rendered and out of DaVinci Resolve as a video clip, they should play smoothly in your media player software. In the meantime, in the Delivery window, you could try rendering individual clips to see how the effects look before rendering your whole project. Hope that helps.
@@C0ntiChannel Thanks very much
You're welcome!
for some reason it actually has film damage meaning it doesnt play do you know why?
Many thanks
You're very welcome, @Ferry.
Thank you!
You're welcome, @Johannes Burkhard Mueller. Keep safe!
what if I wanted to choose more a brown like color instead, is it harder to do
Hi @L0rdCROISSANT. You can add a Solid Color edit from the Generators menu under Effects in your Edit window. Place the Solid Color edit in a video track above the one containing your video clip. Then under Inspector and Generator, choose a brown colour shade, e.g. #7d532a, and then under Settings and Composite, change Composite Mode to 'Color' so that this is applied to your video. You also won't have to reduce Saturation in the Color area from 50 to 0 as shown at 0.40 in this video. Hope that this helps.
@@C0ntiChannel first I want to say thank you for responding... majority don't believe in taking the time hahaha sigh.
will give this a try too thanks :)
You're very welcome, @L0rdCROISSANT. Good luck with your DaVinci Resolve work.
can we do this in the free version too?
Hi @ancientgear7192. All of my tutorials are done in this version of DR. All the best.
for some reason my video gets really slow and kind of like loops before going to the next cut
Same i don’t what’s going on
Nice!
thank you for the tip 🤪😜
Can i do this on phone?
Thank you
You're welcome, @saajuenter.
How about the audio? How do I make it more like an old film?
Hi @Gam3r_Play3r. That's a good question. I will see if I can make a tutorial sometime.
Thanx man
You're very welcome, @Frost.
coooooool Duuude
it does not work on multiple layers etc
Hi @dobkun. If you've already added the OpenFX filters and applied appearance settings with these to a clip on one layer, you can right-click on this and select Copy. Right-click on a clip on a separate layer, choose Paste Attributes (ALT/OPTION + V), and tick the Plugins box under the Video Attributes header before selecting Apply. Hope that helps.
mine just freezes
Apps er name ki
Hi @Mahimahmed99. It's DaVinci Resolve by Blackmagic Design.
Yes. But what about actual film damage? You are replicating film-negative damage. Film-positive damage should show up as white, not black.
Any telecine transfer of damaged film should also have 1. Hairs (preferably eyelash ones) jumping up and down on the side of the frame, 2. Glue or other plicemarks on splices, 3. Minor or major sprockethole damage (image jumping up and down erratically). Optionally: 4. Burn-in marks (preferably near splices).
Your tutorial seems like a millennial's expectation of what old film looks like, not like someone familiar with old film trying to re-create the actual experience?
Thanks so much for this. Exactly what I was looking for!
You're very welcome, @Drew McGee.
Great tutorial!
Many thanks for your kind words, @aindriugreen.
Thank you sir!
You're very welcome, @UnathiGX. Happy Holidays!
Thank youuu! Exactly what I was looking for !☺️
You're very welcome, @SUZANNA KATALANA. Glad that you found what you were looking for.