
I'd like to see the functionality of Adobe Prelude (and some of Kyno - https://lesspain.software/kyno/ -- It would be awesome if BM bought Kyno and incorporated it wholesale into Resolve like Fusion and Fairlight...) incorporated into the cut page (or its own page) for logging/ingest. I frequently record long form events (sports, conferences, etc.) and need to get many sub-clips from the main clip (the total recording, which can be over an hour long). It is a pain to have to pull overlapping clips out of the total (say when there are two (or more) athletes (or discussants) on screen at the same time and I need to do a highlight reel for each).
In other words, I have to bring in multiple copies of the main clip and cut out each part. Having to go through each copy of the main clip and then cut out different parts is far more time consuming than it needs to be, especially when there are overlaps (e.g. discussant 2 coming on stage, while discussant 1 is leaving, thus an overlap). (Note: If someone knows a simple way to do this, I'm all ears!)
This creates a real advantage in that you only need to go through a clip once to get all of your sub-clips (and adding metadata), rather than making multiple rounds through, saving a huge amount of time. Especially during the rough assembly because you only need to drag and drop the related clips onto the timeline and then do the fine edits to finalize that timeline.
It gets even better if you can do all of your color correction first and then sub-clip it so that you don't have to correct each one after the fact (why it is better to have this capability built-in rather than use a 3rd party app, such as Kyno).
Another limitation of Resolve's sub-clip function is that you need to specifically enable "expanding" the sub-clip. This is important in the event you mistakenly made the sub-clip too small and need to add a few frames/seconds. If you don't click the "expanding" option, then you are stuck with the size you originally sub-clipped it.
While Resolve does have a very primitive sub-clip function, it is very awkward in that you have to separately rename the clip to something meaningful and you really can't add searchable metadata. Both things that are needed if you have a lot of sub-clips and need to find a specific one. Prelude gives you the option to name each sub-clip and enter metadata on it at the time you mark the in and out points.
I used to use this all the time when I had Adobe CC and Prelude and it made assembling edits much easier from long form recordings (e.g. highlight reels). The ability to use smart bins to automatically group sub-clips (say by name) would be a huge time saver!
Finally, this feature would, at least in my mind, be a forerunner to a full clip management database (i.e. MAM) so that clips could be found (searched for) and assembled from many recordings. This would have applicability to news casts, feature films, sports (highlight reels), weddings, etc. If I remember correctly, this is one of the signature features of Avid.
To be clear, Adobe Prelude is non-destructive. When it "sub-clips", it just creates a XML entry in a file that essentially says "the sub-clip is in this file, starts here, ends here, and the user has attached this metadata". With Resolve's existing database structure, ALL of this functionality could be incorporated into the master database and then be searchable, not only within a particular project, but BETWEEN projects!
In other words, I have to bring in multiple copies of the main clip and cut out each part. Having to go through each copy of the main clip and then cut out different parts is far more time consuming than it needs to be, especially when there are overlaps (e.g. discussant 2 coming on stage, while discussant 1 is leaving, thus an overlap). (Note: If someone knows a simple way to do this, I'm all ears!)
This creates a real advantage in that you only need to go through a clip once to get all of your sub-clips (and adding metadata), rather than making multiple rounds through, saving a huge amount of time. Especially during the rough assembly because you only need to drag and drop the related clips onto the timeline and then do the fine edits to finalize that timeline.
It gets even better if you can do all of your color correction first and then sub-clip it so that you don't have to correct each one after the fact (why it is better to have this capability built-in rather than use a 3rd party app, such as Kyno).
Another limitation of Resolve's sub-clip function is that you need to specifically enable "expanding" the sub-clip. This is important in the event you mistakenly made the sub-clip too small and need to add a few frames/seconds. If you don't click the "expanding" option, then you are stuck with the size you originally sub-clipped it.
While Resolve does have a very primitive sub-clip function, it is very awkward in that you have to separately rename the clip to something meaningful and you really can't add searchable metadata. Both things that are needed if you have a lot of sub-clips and need to find a specific one. Prelude gives you the option to name each sub-clip and enter metadata on it at the time you mark the in and out points.
I used to use this all the time when I had Adobe CC and Prelude and it made assembling edits much easier from long form recordings (e.g. highlight reels). The ability to use smart bins to automatically group sub-clips (say by name) would be a huge time saver!
Finally, this feature would, at least in my mind, be a forerunner to a full clip management database (i.e. MAM) so that clips could be found (searched for) and assembled from many recordings. This would have applicability to news casts, feature films, sports (highlight reels), weddings, etc. If I remember correctly, this is one of the signature features of Avid.
To be clear, Adobe Prelude is non-destructive. When it "sub-clips", it just creates a XML entry in a file that essentially says "the sub-clip is in this file, starts here, ends here, and the user has attached this metadata". With Resolve's existing database structure, ALL of this functionality could be incorporated into the master database and then be searchable, not only within a particular project, but BETWEEN projects!
Hardware: ASUS Crosshair VIII, AMD 3950X, Gigabyte GTX 1080 Ti, 64GB RAM, 2TB m.2 SSD, 2TB (4x500GB) SSDs, 36TB NAS
Software: Win10 Pro, DR Studio 17.3, Reaper, Affinity Photo & Designer, Skylum Luminar/Aurora HDR, OBS
Adobe free since 2018!
Software: Win10 Pro, DR Studio 17.3, Reaper, Affinity Photo & Designer, Skylum Luminar/Aurora HDR, OBS
Adobe free since 2018!