Sun May 12, 2024 1:03 pm
Create a timeline with the resolution set to maximum working resolution such as 1920 x 1920 and resize mode set to crop and then modify the output resolution to your vertical such as 1024 x 1920 with resize mode set to crop. The timeline acts as your working resolution such that things like compound clips and nested timelines can exist outside the bounds of your output resolution. This will allow you to use dynamic zoom on your adjustment layer.
Add - What is most annoying about Resolve in this regard is that there is no way to see the extents of an image that lays outside the bounds of the output 'window'. There is a long standing request to have a shaded view of the source clip extents outside the current timeline output window (same applies to the source viewer which is also limited to the output window extents).
What I do to get around this is to temporarily set output resolution to match timeline resolution and use the vertical overlay to see the extents of the vertical window and then when I've moved things around I then switch my output resolution to vertical.
Last edited by
Steve Alexander on Sun May 12, 2024 1:31 pm, edited 2 times in total.
aka Barkinmadd
Resolve Studio 19.0b3 | Fusion Studio 19.0b3 | Win 11 Pro (22H2) | i9-7940x, P4000 (536.96, 8GB VRAM), 64GB RAM, M.2 boot, SSD scratch, RAID10 data | (laptop) 16" MacBook Pro M1 MAX, 32 GPU cores, 64 GB RAM, 2 TB SSD, Sonoma 14.5