Thomas Singh February 7, 2018 Share February 7, 2018 I have a dynamic key frame that is lifing the brightness to a certain level on my first clip, and want to continue from that same brightness level on the next clip. How would you go about this? The lighting setups on both the clips are the same, so I was hoping I could do something like "copying" the last keyframe on clip one and insert it on the first frame on the second clip. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chris DiBerardino February 7, 2018 Share February 7, 2018 You can copy the grade, then just delete the darker keyframe and the whole shot should stay at the brighter level. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Thomas Singh February 7, 2018 Author Share February 7, 2018 Seriously... sometimes my brain doesn't work. Thanks! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Emily Haine February 8, 2018 Share February 8, 2018 Copying a grade from one clip with keyframes / dynamics to another clip is not possible with the default setup in Davinci Resolve today. You can try the following: Copy grade to a still Right click in the gallery are, and choose apply grade using / keyframe aligning source startcode or keyframe aligning start frame. Paste the grade from the still to your new clip Even with this method you will probably see that the keyframes are displaced or that dynamics turn into static keyframes. Black Magic Design know about this issue as it has been addressed several times the last years, but it seems like they can't fix it for some reason. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dylan R. Hopkin February 8, 2018 Share February 8, 2018 Add the brightness change to a separate node on clip 1. Copy this node to the second clip. Keyframe the opacity of the «brightness-node» to taste on both clips. This way you have the brightness adjustment a separate building block. Which is the same. I tend to solve some dynamics this way instead of animating the color correction itself. This is very handy for fixing unwanted exposure variations too. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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