
Here’s a rundown of what’s covered in each lesson: Editing in the Cut Page Read our guide to watching our courses with non-English subtitles. You’ll tackle a variety of projects from a documentary to a commercial promo and even a narrative dialogue scene.Īnd don't forget, all the lessons feature subtitles, which can be viewed in over 100 languages.

With over seven hours of in-depth instruction to mastering DaVinci Resolve, there’s something for everyone in this course, from advanced users to editors who are considering switching to Resolve.Īfter downloading the course materials, you can follow along with Ollie as he guides you through a rapid edit in the Cut Page, advanced techniques in the Edit Page, and finessing your project with motion graphics, audio sweetening, and final delivery. Because of that, the Cut page will gain new features, including "enhanced audio support, key framing, split edits and more.Advanced Editing in DaVinci Resolve Lessons

"This makes it very difficult to move to the iPad without changing it in a way that would cause problems for professional editors who rely on the edit page for their work," the company said. In addition, there's no plan to bring the Edit page to the iPad version, as it's essentially designed for a keyboard and mouse. There are some changes to the UI because of the screen size, as the menu bar will be removed, for instance. "This means DaVinci Resolve for iPad is the same professional tool, and the same codebase as used on major Hollywood feature films," Blackmagic pointed out.

In addition, you'll be able to open desktop projects on the iPad version, including shared collaborative projects via Blackmagic Cloud. The iPad app will support file formats including H.264, H.265, Apple ProRes and Blackmagic RAW, with clips available from the "iPad Pro internal storage and Photos library, externally connected iCloud or USB-C media disks," the company wrote on Facebook. Otherwise, though, "it will be similar to the desktop version," Blackmagic said. It won't be a full version of the PC/Mac app, as it will initially feature just the Cut and Color pages. Blackmagic Design is bringing it's popular DaVinci Resolve video editing app to the iPad, promising support for RAW, cloud collaboration and more, the company announced on Twitter.
