This has to be one of the best editing tutorials I’ve seen. So sick to see the bts of all of the decisions that go into the process. Most RU-vid videos always try to make everything as concise as possible but there’s so much value to seeing everything in real time like this
I'm currently planning a project with floating lights and I searched ages for helpful tutorials. Stumbled upon this accidentally. Was exactly what I was looking for. This is absolutely awesome, thank you so much for this.
Man, u just wake up and suddenly decides to change the world, definitely insane way to teach people no gatekeep no BS. my man wish u blow up on youtube
Purely brilliant mate. That was so so amazing to watch. Fully immersed the whole way through. You've always been a visionary on a different plane. So grateful to be brought into your world for a glimpse of what goes on in your brain!
You really got yourself into the weeds of editing Mitchell!! Love listening to you go through the edit and you reiterate that it doesn’t need to be perfect.
You got it! The hardest part for me is always getting something down on paper. Once its there ive found it easier to get granular and perfect the details, or switch clips out. That approach has speed up my editing workflow the most.
Literally a master at work. It's so funny how there are such small things that pop up every 5 minutes that I'm like ahh thats interesting! Epic work here bro! Half way through, will be watching the rest right now!
bro i have no words for you that how much I appreciate this video.. watching this free on youtube feels bad .. this is kind of content I pay for my internet.. litterlly best video.. love this man love from India
Absolutely amazing! I love that this is a blend between philosophy snd tutorial. The why is even more important than the how. Can’t wait for the next one!
Absolute the best break down video of all time Mitchell. Learned so much already and I'm half way! 10 out of 10 recommendation already. Stoked to see more of these, like color grading 😏
Love the content, man! I have a timeline where I drop cool edit transitions as references, and I label them as light leaks, flashes, match cuts, fast and quick cuts, even sound that work as transitions (without anything magical on the screens). The idea is to do what you did: break down how they work and understand why they work. So, thanks for this man!
Amazing work and tips, I can tell how much you enjoy the process by the way you're moving and explaining when editing. I do the same when I edit haha. I'm impressed it's your first time live editing, it was really good! Thank you, would love to see more!
Super tutorial! Man I need this log to after effects workflow tutorial so much because i'm very more comfortable using after effects and im always stuck when working with my log files
41:01 i dont know where but i learn this trick years ago and this is still best trick to match contrast.. turn your footage into black and white and then match contrast
As a beginner getting into video editing and filmmaking I gotta say this is really inspiring and I hope you'll release more content like this! One question I had is the following: would you recommend getting into After Effects for filmmaking VFX rather than Fusion? Is one more adapted than the other for certain kind of work?
I see you haven't switched this very useful setting: Project settings -> Input Scaling -> Scale full frame with crop This makes it so that no matter the size or aspect ratio of your footage, it will always fill the screen in your composition when inserted onto the timeline. You can still zoom out after, but no black bars on the sides at first.
I feel that, was in Final Cut for a long time, then made the jump to premeiere for a decade, was really hesitant to jump over to DaVinci. About a month after ripping off the bandaid I never looked back. If you have the time to get into it I highly reccomend it!
Nice video! Definitely help me understand few things ❤ I want to ask you if you prefer doing the grading after putting the 3D Elements and Compositing or first grade the footage then do the 3D & Compositing?
You color grade the footage and the pass it to AE for the VFX right? which export settings do you use so it doesn't lose quality when bring it back to davinci?
For the sake of the tutorial I did, but the proper compositing workflow would be to export a Log ProRes 4444 XQ. Then use a reference look to work in rec.709 color space, then export a 4444 XQ file back to DaVinci. If youre going to composite ontop of colored footage, i'd use 4444 XQ. Utilizing ProRes will help retain as much data as possible. Hope this helps, maybe I'll make a better composite workflow tutorial in the future!
Thats a great question, I know almost nothing when it comes to fusion. If fusion has the ability to import 3D objects and textures, as well as create a camera solve, it should be possible.