Laurent Fluttert
Forum Replies Created
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I don’t think there is a really easy way but I do it like this:
On a clip with the nodes you want to copy (plus other nodes), create a duplicate version of the grade (ctrl y on windows or command y on mac). Delete all the nodes you don’t need and leave the nodes you want to copy. Grab this clip so that it goes into the gallery (ctrl alt g or command alt g). Go back to the clip and restore your original grade (several times control z or command z) or go back to your original grade (control/command n or b).
Now select the clips in the timeline you want the nodes copied to and in the gallery middle click on the grabbed grade or right mouse click and choose “append node graph”. First option just makes a grade with the nodes you wanted, second option appends the new nodes to the nodes that might already be there.Best,
Laurent -
Laurent Fluttert
September 5, 2018 at 9:53 am in reply to: How to insert clip between other clips in timeline?This is basic editing. Of course there are several ways to do what you try to achieve. You could do it like this:
– select the part of the video you want to edit into your timeline by setting an in and an out marker on the source.
– deselect audio tracks on the left of your timeline so that no audio is presented to the timeline (red boxes around A1, A2 and so on.
– make the audio tracks in the sequence inactive by deselecting the boxes with <> in it (otherwise silence will be inserted).
– press Insert, the fifth button from the left below your source window . You can also drag the clip into the timeline.
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Laurent Fluttert
August 30, 2018 at 10:42 am in reply to: New DCP Kakadu encoding option versus DCP-o-MaticNo it’s not. I built a Hackingtosh. I couldn’t live with the trashcan because of the glitches and the ‘workaround’: slow rendering.
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Laurent Fluttert
August 30, 2018 at 8:34 am in reply to: New DCP Kakadu encoding option versus DCP-o-MaticFour days ago I made a DCP using Kaduku from within Resolve Studio on a mac. The result was not good, every few minutes there were glitches (most of the time green flashes), mostly accompanied by noises in the soundtrack. So I went back to my Windows computer and made a DCP with Easy DCP, also from within Resolve Studio. As always, that worked well.
Laurent
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Laurent Fluttert
February 1, 2017 at 12:20 pm in reply to: Exporting a Project from Davinci Free to Davinci StudioHi Adriano,
Yes it works, I do that all the time. Back and forth between studio and the free version.Laurent
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I had a MacPro with the same configuration and had a GTX285 in it. It was a bit tricky to get it to work with Resolve, you’ll have to find the right cuda driver for it. Color grading goes well up to HD, maybe 2K but for Ultra HD it’s too slow.
Downside is that the GTX285 works up to Resolve 12.0, from 12.5 on the card is no longer supported and does not work.Laurent
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Under menu item ‘Timeline’ you’ll find output blanking. Just choose 2.35 in your case.
Best,
Laurent -
Hi Edwin,
If Resolve works on your iMac, you will be able to use all the features that are in the software. Maybe it’s a bit slow, but that’s it.
The free version basically has everything the payed for version has, except for noise reduction and the ability to go beyond 4K. I think there are some more differences, but nothing big.Laurent
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Laurent Fluttert
June 17, 2016 at 1:07 pm in reply to: Resolve 12.5 crashes when GTX 770 is enabled in Windows 10I did some further testing: Resolve crashes whenever more than 1 GPU is enabled. Doesn’t matter which driver is installed.
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Sorry for my late reply, I just read the original post.
I would not bother going back to the original files. Why not just export a QuickTime of the whole episode, also export an edl of videotrack V1 and use that edl as a preconformed EDL in Resolve. (Put the QuickTime in the media pool, right mouse button: timelines/import/pre-conformed edl). That way you will cut the exported Quicktime back to the shots and you’re ready to grade.