Davinci resolve studio vs final cut pro10/31/2023 In mid-2013 I did a two-Insight series on breaking down Final Cut Pro X’s Color Board. We’ll also look at supplementing the FCPx interface with a super-useful image evaluation tool that has shipped with every Mac for over 20 years! Related Insights This Insight will focus on making our Primary corrections and understanding the Order of Operations I’ll be advocating for working in FCPx.Īt the moment I’m ignoring the Auto-Balance function… but we’ll probably discuss it later in the Challenge. Final Cut Pro X: Primary Color Corrections and Order of Operations In other words: rather than handing you a fish filet, I’m teaching you how to catch a fish and then use a knife to trim it. Once you understand How and Why I approach FCPx the way I do, you’ll be able to do this same thing for ANY color grading app you use. They’ve even added external hardware to bring a traditional. The Cut page and the Edit pages allow you to choose your approach to editing. Resolve seeks to blend the speed of Final Cut with the familiar conventions of Premiere Pro. But knowing how I created my workflow? Knowing why I make the recommendations I do? Blackmagic Design turned DaVinci Resolve from a color grading app into a one-stop-shop for postproduction. The point of this series is to teach you how I break down toolsets to help me understand how to develop a workflow in the first place!Īnd since each of us has a different workflow, we’ll develop different strategies to solve our unique workflows. The point of this series isn’t to provide the Single Definitive Final Cut Pro X Color Correction workflow. Adopt my thinking, Adapt to your workflow This series will show you how I’d approach it.Īnd it all starts by breaking down the toolset to develop a workflow. 10min read Post-Production Copied When it comes to video editing software, there are two main contenders: DaVinci Resolve vs. I’ll say this up-front: If I had to grade in FCPx and do high-quality work that I can be proud of… I could do it. I’m approaching this Challenge by answering: How do I transfer my DaVinci Resolve and SpeedGrade habits to FCPx, while being restricted to its (more limited) toolset. This is a short series of Insights where I show you how I evaluate Final Cut Pro X’s image processing pipeline to help you make smart decisions about which FCPx tools to use and when.Īs if I were stuck on a desert island, I’ll restrict myself to using ONLY the native filter set in FCPx (at the end of this series I’ll explore the question: If I could only bring 1 color correction plug-in, which would it be?) Here’s the color correction equivalent: If you were stuck on a desert island with only Final Cut Pro X-and no plug-ins-and a project you had to color correct, how would you go about it? Welcome to the Final Cut Pro X Color Correction Desert Island Challenge DaVinci Resolve (295.00) and Final Cut Pro (299.99) offer nearly identical prices for a perpetual license (future updates are free). You know the question: If you were stuck on a desert island and could only bring one book/record/movie, what would it be? Tutorials / FCPX Desert Island Challenge / Final Cut Pro X Color Correction Desert Island Challenge Seriesĭay 6: 25 Insights in 25 Days Holiday Marathon What is a ‘Desert Island Challenge?’
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