![]() Of the two options described above, I think subclips are the simplest and fastest.Īs for keyboard shortcuts for moving clips to the timeline instead of dragging, of course there are: you can see the keyboard shortcuts in the Edit menu. I like working that way anyway you can enable a filmstrip above the list, similar to Final Cut's list view. So if you use duration markers with marker keywords, be sure to use list view in the media pool. One caveat: I always use the media pool in list view rather than thumbnail view I learned yesterday here on the forum that if you use thumbnail view the smart bins for marker keywords will appear empty. You can't really add metadata to a duration marker, but you can give it a name, a description, and assign marker keywords to it when you assign marker keywords a smart bin for those keywords will automatically be created (or if you use existing keywords the duration marker will be added to those keyword smart bins). Like subclips, you can have multiple duration markers per clip. There didn't used to be a keyboard shortcut for this, but now there is: shift-command-m. Duration markers: You can convert any in-out range to a duration marker. ![]() All your selects for the entire project will be in that smart bin.Ģ. ![]() Create a smart bin to search for all clips with the word "subclip" in their clip name and you instantly have the equivalent of Final Cut's "Favorites" collection. All subclips with the keyword "beach," for example, are easily discoverable and you can even set up smart bins with those filters so the bins populate automatically. If you forget to do this, no worries: just right-click on the subclip in the media pool and choose "edit subclip" and you can add handles that way.īy default, subclips have the word "subclip" added to their clip names, which allows you to easily discover them through filtered searches. The main caveat with subclips is that you have to remember to set the in and out points a little wider than what you actually need, otherwise you'll have no handles. And of course you can create multiple subclips per clip. You can add metadata and flags to that subclip just like any other clip. If you now hit the keyboard shortcut option-b, it will turn that in/out range into a subclip. Subclips: open a clip from the media pool into the Source Viewer and select in and out points. There are a couple of ways of creating the equivalent of Final Cut's favorites in Resolve.ġ. The two aspects of favorites in Final Cut that make them so powerful are 1) you can have multiple favorites per clip, and 2) there's a filter already set up for them, allowing you to immediately see all the favorites in your project, or you can apply multiple filters to see just the favorites that include a particular keyword or that were from a particular camera, etc. ![]()
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