Camaxide wrote:While that would certainly work it would also not be a very smart or good way since I'd be redoing the last 10 minutes of work. a single buttonpress is likely easier to revert in another way I'd expect. I already went over the lots of clips and manually reset color for each one by one - which still was faster than reverting save - but I'm sure there are other ways to do it for all clips, just I'm not experienced enough to know how
My opinion: the Undo command works on a clip-by-clip basis, so even if you did a timeline-wide change, you would still have to undo it on every shot.
For this reason, you have to be extremely careful when making changes like this. My advice would be before you do something like this, consider 2 alternative methods:
1) duplicate the timeline before making an undoable change (like a massive Auto Color). That way, if you change your mind, you can always go back to the other copy of the timeline and just use that instead.
2) use a Fixed Node Tree structure where you have X number of nodes available in every single clip. Each node gets one and only one kind of correction, whether it's a curve, or a key, or a lift/gamma/gain correction, or a power window, or whatever. That way, you can make the change to a single empty node. If you change your mind, you can reset that one node, then highlight all the other clips and make that same change to one node only in every clip. That won't change anything else.
I'm not personally a fan of Auto Color, but I get that it has its uses, and BMD has said it's been improved with the neural engine in v16.