Thread: I need to learn Resolve comprehensively in three days.

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  1. #1 I need to learn Resolve comprehensively in three days. 
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    Anyone know any good tutorials? I need to learn this at a professional level in my spare time in three days. I thought I could just pick up and go, but this program isn't the cakewalk I was anticipating. Conforming is kind of a nightmare...random clips go unrecognized and the file names aren't even marked anywhere so I can reconnect them. Off a FCPX formatted XML file, I think. Anyone else have this problem? How do I manually reconnect footage?

    Can I preview render footage? My workstation (8800GT) is not fast enough to play back Epic footage anywhere near real time.

    And is each secondary its own node or can I have unlimited/multiple secondaries within a node? How do you view the alpha of a key? Combine a key and a secondary? Where are my scopes? How do I go back and adjust color temperature, ISO, etc. on my .r3ds? How do I toggle on/off grades and/or nodes? Inquiring minds want to know... Especially about those scopes; I am helpless without them! Thanks!
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  2. #2  
    Senior Member Stephen Mick's Avatar
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    Buy the Ripple Training course for Resolve. Money well spent.
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    Senior Member Steve Sherrick's Avatar
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    Ripple Training will get you going. I would dedicate at least a solid week of training to get to the point where you feel comfortable with a client in the room.

    Conforming involves testing. There are options within Resolve config for how to conform so you have to be familiar with how it all works.

    Alexis does do a great job though with the Ripple Training. The FXPHD course is good too. These are hours of training. Some of it you will have to watch 2 or 3 times. Doing it in your spare time in 3 days seems very ambitious. But everyone learns at different rates. If you pick up on stuff very quickly maybe you can squeeze this into a short timeframe.
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    Thanks, I'll look into it... I wanted to buy a book but nothing's available! I can afford $80, though, if it saves time. Unfortunately I only have the time I have at an edit suite, but maybe I will bring the video back with me and watch it at home and learn on my 13'' macbook.

    Any advice on relinking media? I imported a FCPX XML file (I think?) that was generated by Premiere pro and randomly like one in ten clips is unlinked and nowhere does it list what clips it's expecting to find. How can I bring the footage back? With Color it was just a matter of reconnect media more or less... Here I don't even know what file names I'm looking for. Everything is .r3d, no time warps, no funny stuff, just cuts. All the other footage is there exactly as expected--it's very strange. I don't have access to Premiere Pro so I can't change the XML.
    Last edited by Matt W.; 05-21-2012 at 08:41 PM.
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  6. #6  
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    Quote Originally Posted by Matt W. View Post
    Anyone know any good tutorials? I need to learn this at a professional level in my spare time in three days. I thought I could just pick up and go, but this program isn't the cakewalk I was anticipating. Conforming is kind of a nightmare...random clips go unrecognized and the file names aren't even marked anywhere so I can reconnect them.
    I would no more expect somebody to walk up to Resolve and know how to run it in three days than I would for somebody to grab a camera and learn how to light in three days, or walk into a recording studio and know how to mix a movie in three days. To me, the generally-accepted theory is that you need at least 5000 hours before you're really good at something; maybe double that to be an expert.

    Why not just hire somebody who knows what they're doing? At the worst, maybe they could work out your technical issues and get you up to speed. There's all kinds of freelance colorists who do this stuff, depending on what area of the world you're in.

    BTW, make sure you have a decent, calibrated monitor before beginning any kind of color correction. All of it is worthless if you can't trust what you're seeing.
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  7. #7  
    Quote Originally Posted by Marc Wielage View Post
    I would no more expect somebody to walk up to Resolve and know how to run it in three days than I would for somebody to grab a camera and learn how to light in three days, or walk into a recording studio and know how to mix a movie in three days. To me, the generally-accepted theory is that you need at least 5000 hours before you're really good at something; maybe double that to be an expert.

    Why not just hire somebody who knows what they're doing? At the worst, maybe they could work out your technical issues and get you up to speed. There's all kinds of freelance colorists who do this stuff, depending on what area of the world you're in.

    BTW, make sure you have a decent, calibrated monitor before beginning any kind of color correction. All of it is worthless if you can't trust what you're seeing.
    / there is a huge difference between learning the craft of grading and learning a new grading program.... your statement is prob meant for learning the craft of grading.
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  8. #8  
    Senior Member Gunleik Groven's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Marc Wielage View Post
    I would no more expect somebody to walk up to Resolve and know how to run it in three days than I would for somebody to grab a camera and learn how to light in three days, or walk into a recording studio and know how to mix a movie in three days. To me, the generally-accepted theory is that you need at least 5000 hours before you're really good at something; maybe double that to be an expert.

    Why not just hire somebody who knows what they're doing? At the worst, maybe they could work out your technical issues and get you up to speed. There's all kinds of freelance colorists who do this stuff, depending on what area of the world you're in.

    BTW, make sure you have a decent, calibrated monitor before beginning any kind of color correction. All of it is worthless if you can't trust what you're seeing.
    true and true and true...

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  9. #9  
    Senior Member Matt Gottshalk's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Stephen Mick View Post
    Buy the Ripple Training course for Resolve. Money well spent.
    Yup.
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  10. #10  
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    Sounds like I'm buying that training vid. The interface actually seems very simple, but I'm probably working in a very inefficient way right now separating each correction into its own node. Also it's just slow! Not worried about the craft stuff, just the interface. I graded my first feature in 2006 (on FCP's built in plug ins in two days for $100; it grossed >$5 million) or so and have been learning each new prosumer app since...

    The conform stuff is what's really giving me a headache, but I'll buy that training video, trouble shoot for a while, and then post more if I can't figure it out. Thanks.
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