Please, if you're able, help me out of this jam! I'll be damned if I have to use After Effects warp stabilizer. I wish there was some way to just smooth out the path, like one would a line in Adobe Illustrator, for instance. When using the "Camera Tracker" in Fusion, it looks like it figures out the path of the camera really damn well. The footage I've tried to stabilize is done with a gimbal, so it isn't very shaky, I just want to slightly smooth it out - but no stabilizer seem to be able to do that. A member suggested going to "", installing the "Reactor repository of Fusion" and using the "Flexitrack".
I found NOTHING, only a few videos how to "lock-on" stabilize.Įventuallt I ended up on a thread on reddit where someone had the same issue. Then, I heard about Fusion and I scoured the internet for tutorials how to stabilize there. It really feels like I've gone down a rabbit hole the last few days trying to find an integrated way to stabilize footage in DaVinci Resolve 16.įirst, I tried the integrated stabilizer. At least until Premiere doesn't make you nest before applying certain effects.Hi! First of all, hi! It's nice to be here. These small but time consuming tasks are annoying, but part of the job of any editor. Then I drag every nested sequence into a sub-bin that I place in the bin with all my standard sequences so that they're out of the way in my project bin. I call mine whatever I've named the video clip, with "_NESTED" at the end. That way I don't have to open the nested sequence to adjust any effects I've applied to the clip.Īlso, keep a consistent naming convention for your nested sequences. I then copy/paste every previous effect (Lumeri, for example) from the clip inside the nest, to the nested sequence itself. Personally I don't do this, I only do it when I need to apply an effect that requires a nest. The only thing I could say to make it a smoother process is that when we you're bringing footage into your timeline that would need to be nested for warp stabilizer or time remapping effects, nest it at the start instead of the end. I wouldn't select multiple clips, I'd do it individually. Unfortunately you're already doing it the best way. select a bunch of clips, nest them individually) rather than doing it one by one? I've done a ton of research but cannot find anyone else running into this issue so I must be doing something wrong!
How do you guys get past these issues? If there's no way around nesting clips, is there at least a way to nest each clip as their own nested sequence all in one shot (eg.
This nesting issue also arises when I've warp stabilized 1080p footage and want to speed ramp it and other common scenarios.
Hopefully these screenshots will make it easier to understand
But this leaves gaps between nested and non-nested clips making it very hard to edit anything inside the nest as you cannot see when each individual clip starts and line them up with the rest of the timeline. If I select multiple clips that aren't next to each other in the timeline and nest them (to save time from doing them individually), it moves these to a new nested sequence on another video track. The issue I'm getting is when stabilizing the 4k clips obviously Premiere requires you to nest the clip first to match the sequence which is fine, but doing this quickly across multiple 4k clips scattered across the timeline takes a long time, and it's messy creating a separate nest for each clip. I always have projects where some footage was shot at 1080p 25fps, and 4k 25fps so that I can zoom into the picture and I edit this on a 1080p 25fps timeline.