That was an amazing workflow technique using a pancake timeline. can you also please explain why you change the project settings. you didnt explain why we need to change the color management area.
Great question! I do a lot of work with a local production company and someone on their staff (someone more experience with color than me) studied the colors and outputs of all of the various color settings to see how the end results looked once rendered and uploaded to various different sites like Vimeo, TH-cam and Instagram. He found that these settings would give the best color reproduction once the video was published. I hope this helps!
Thank you! During the culling process I become very familiar with the footage. After watching it several times I will begin to use the color codes to tag clips pertaining to certain topics depending on the subject matter. When it comes to following a storyboard or script I will have that open in a separate window and just use it as a guideline while I'm piecing the video together.
That is correct. With my workflow and the way I shoot If I have footage that is 60fps I'm typically not playing it back at normal speed. If there are clips that I don't want in slow motion and/or I want to retain the audio I will just plan ahead and shoot in 24fps. Then I edit in a 24fps timeline so that all of the final clips in the video are 24fps with no issues with interpolation. I hope that helps!
If you've got a bunch of footage with variable frame rates like you mentioned and it's a multicam DO NOT convert to the same frame rate. This will screw up your whole project. I only convert clips in different frame rates if I don't plan on using audio. If you have clips like you mentioned with a variation of frame rates then you would just edit with them as is in a 24fps timeline. Resolve will figure out the interpolation and make it all look correct.
First day as freelancer and you came up with this fire tutorial! Appreciate what you're doing for the community! Keep it up 💪
Thank you so much! This made my day 🙌🏼 more content coming soon!
Keyboard shortcuts to ripple delete clip before or after the playhead:
CTRL + SHIFT + [ or ]
That was an amazing workflow technique using a pancake timeline. can you also please explain why you change the project settings. you didnt explain why we need to change the color management area.
Great question! I do a lot of work with a local production company and someone on their staff (someone more experience with color than me) studied the colors and outputs of all of the various color settings to see how the end results looked once rendered and uploaded to various different sites like Vimeo, TH-cam and Instagram. He found that these settings would give the best color reproduction once the video was published. I hope this helps!
Love your keyboard
Thank you!
Hey @DominicKrupp i have a question; why do you convert the output color space to Rec.709-A rather than Rec.709(Scene) ?
I love it! Always learning from you, dude!
Appreciate you, dude!
How to make hollywood movies like background plz make a video on it
Excellent overview. How do you stay on track with script/storyboard?
Thank you! During the culling process I become very familiar with the footage. After watching it several times I will begin to use the color codes to tag clips pertaining to certain topics depending on the subject matter. When it comes to following a storyboard or script I will have that open in a separate window and just use it as a guideline while I'm piecing the video together.
you switched to davinci ?
If we have a clip with audio and change it's frame rate it looses sinc with it's audio...
That is correct. With my workflow and the way I shoot If I have footage that is 60fps I'm typically not playing it back at normal speed. If there are clips that I don't want in slow motion and/or I want to retain the audio I will just plan ahead and shoot in 24fps. Then I edit in a 24fps timeline so that all of the final clips in the video are 24fps with no issues with interpolation. I hope that helps!
I am editing a doc with multiple frame rates videos. Should I convert then alll to same frate rate? Through proxy or optimized media?
How should I do it so I can have a multicam edit? I have 25fps, 29,97fps, and separated audio at 30fos… it is messy
If you've got a bunch of footage with variable frame rates like you mentioned and it's a multicam DO NOT convert to the same frame rate. This will screw up your whole project. I only convert clips in different frame rates if I don't plan on using audio. If you have clips like you mentioned with a variation of frame rates then you would just edit with them as is in a 24fps timeline. Resolve will figure out the interpolation and make it all look correct.
Cool Dominic, thanks! I am planning to sinc all images tracks with my audio and then make a multicam clip