Book Image

Video Editing Made Easy with DaVinci Resolve 18

By : Lance Phillips
5 (1)
Book Image

Video Editing Made Easy with DaVinci Resolve 18

5 (1)
By: Lance Phillips

Overview of this book

Micro content dominates social media marketing, but subpar editing and low-quality videos can shrink your audience. Elevate your social media game with DaVinci Resolve - the world’s most trusted name in color grading that has been used to grade Hollywood films, TV shows, and commercials. Version 18 enables you to edit, compose VFX, mix sound, and deliver videos for different platforms, including social media and the web. You’ll learn the basics of using DaVinci Resolve 18 to create video content, by first gaining an overview of creating a complete short video for social media distribution directly from within the “Cut” page. You’ll discover advanced editing, VFX composition, color grading, and sound editing techniques to enhance your content and fix common video content issues that occur while using consumer cameras or mobile phones. By the end of this book, you’ll be well-equipped to use DaVinci Resolve to edit, fix, finish, and publish short-form video content directly to social media sites such as YouTube, Twitter, and Vimeo.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
1
Part 1: A Quick Start to DaVinci
7
Part 2: Fixing Audio and Video
11
Part 3: Advanced Techniques

Hiding cuts with a split edit

A split edit is a cut where the transition between the audio and video is split to happen at different times.

There are two types of split edit, a J cut where we hear the audio from the next clip before we see the video, and an L cut where the audio from the previous clip is heard over the video of the next clip. They are named J and L cuts after the shape they make on the Timeline. The bottom of the J and L cuts is the audio, and the upright shape of the letter is the video, as the audio appears below the video on the Timeline.

Split edits are good for hiding an edit, as there is a softer transition than a straight cut (through cut), and our brains only have to deal with one sensory change at a time. With a straight cut, the video and audio change at the same time, whereas with a J or L cut, the audio changes at a different time in the video, which softens the edit and makes it less obvious.

With this exercise, we need some audio to play with...