

You can add or remove the cut points manually too. You can move it up and down accepting more or less certain cut points. The magenta line is the threshold of the detection. The higher the line, the more certain DaVinci is about that particular cut.

Vertical lines represent the detected cuts. The finished process looks similar to the one below. The detection process starts and it usually takes some time. To get right into the action press Start. Once you found your clip, right click on it and select Scene Cut Detection. If you cannot find the directory on the list you need to add the location in the program options, so the program knows where to look for the footage. When Resolve is up and running navigate to the Media tab and find your video clip. DaVinci Resolve 12Īll we need is DaVinci Resolve 12, which can be downloaded from the blackmagic website (in case you don’t have it already). A FREE automated way of doing exactly what I described above. Cutting the clip manually is a really tedious work, but luckily there’s a solution for that. To be able to color correct the project we need to split it into single takes. Let’s say we have a video that we want to color correct but we don’t have a project file – just the rendered video, or a project file is not compatible with our color grading suite.
