🔥🔥THANKS FOR WATCHING! If you liked this video, then make sure you check out these 5 Fusion Secrets that you need to know: kzitem.info/news/bejne/wHp3uaifroWmn2k
@DarrenMostyn
11 ай бұрын
Great video Jay! I always teach the order of operations!
@JayLippman
11 ай бұрын
It’s important stuff! Thanks man!
@BulletsNBrass
11 ай бұрын
Short, sweet, helpful. Thanks. I'm so sick of watching 20 minute videos to get two minutes of information.
@JimRobinson-colors
11 ай бұрын
Good that you pointed out the Fusion-Color and variations - But for everyday users - almost everything is left to Right as traditionally done in production by different specialists. And the order of operations as suggested by the order Resolve has them being left to right - was kind of how it was always done. Makes sense that most people were not jumping back and forth - because it was someone else's job. So a colorist wouldn't be going and tweaking the edit and an VFX wouldn't be fooling around with the timeline in the edit - and of course the same with an Audio person. So if you took your graphic and put a UPS truck in the diagram. That all would make sense that you compile the edit and then send out footage to the list of departments - they then do their jobs and it gets sent back to the editor who then replaces the work with the finished product then sends the whole thing out for delivery to wherever the final product is. i.e. broadcast, cinema etc. For people to emulate this process - you can as I said at the top of this comment - just look to the order that Resolve lays things out ( left to Right ) and follow that and the order of jobs is laid out for you. Like you showed in the audio - on the color page - there is another order of operations when working within a node, that can make a big difference. But if you don't do a bunch of stuff on a single node - the order is less important. Cheers Jay. Good video- thanks for posting.
@JayLippman
11 ай бұрын
Thanks Jim! And what you were talking about with a bunch of people working in different departments, and a lot of times with different software, that's why on the deliver page you have options for things like pro tools. It wasn't that long ago that Davinci Resolve wasn't an all in one NLE, so the process was a bit more complicated. Darn kids today have it so easy 🤣
@JimRobinson-colors
11 ай бұрын
@@JayLippman yes - your diagram in your video at 3:01 - shows the where and what the order would be for sending out to different departments - edit to VFX ( Fusion ) then to Colorist who color the VFX and then send back to editor- and the same for the audio etc. That diagram is like a mailing chart for post production. That was my point - that if someone wants to keep things organized. Do it in that order and don't jump back and forth. We all do that, most because it is less boring. But for some people their editing smoothness might be a lot better with no grading on it. Resolve GUI is set up left to right or alphabetical and sometimes it's Good, Better and Best order. Too bad Resolve doesn't tell you how they are presenting lists. All kinds of people think some lists are Resolve suggestions for a certain tool - when in reality it's just alphabetical ( look closely at the Stabilizations choices ) - the default might just be alphabetical and the default might not be the best choice.
@yarrokon
11 ай бұрын
Awesome quick video... That answered a LOT of questions.
@Being-Mango
11 ай бұрын
commention first time because i genuinely want to know more about davinci resolve technical stuffs please make more videos
@JayLippman
11 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching!
@backyardmetalcasting
11 ай бұрын
Thanks Jay that was awesome!❤
@JayLippman
11 ай бұрын
Thanks Dave! Really appreciate you watching!
@jonicolton
11 ай бұрын
thank u! 🤟🏼
@eye41see92
11 ай бұрын
Thank you so much, I was wondering why my color page wasn’t affecting my fusion
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