Gary B. writes:
I recently purchased your DaVinci Resolve 19 Master Bundle – Workflow & Editing training bundle as I am trying to migrate from Premiere Pro. I recall that in it you said that mixed frame rates cannot exist on a timeline. Often my media is submitted in a myriad of forms/rates. How do I deal with that? Also, while working along with your lesson, I was trying to apply a default crossfade and nothing works. I assume this is from the mixed rate problem. Any insights?
Larry replies: It would be more accurate to say that you can’t change the frame rate of a project after you import media into Resolve.
So make sure the first media you import has the frame rate you want to deliver. After that, you can import any frame rate you want and put it into any project. Frame rates of clips that don’t match Resolve will automatically convert to the project frame rate.
So that first import is important.
Frame rate conversion is a tricky subject, because all we have to deal with are discrete frames. Resolve’s Help PDF states (pg 138):
“Since each clip in every timeline defaults to “Project Settings,” changing this setting will change the way most mixed frame rate and speed effected clips will be processed, except for those with custom settings selected.
“There are three options:
Larry, again: You’ll find the frame interpolation options at the very bottom of the Project settings window (shortcut: Shift + 9).
Most of the time, I leave these at their defaults, especially if all frame rates are multiples of each other. For example, 24 & 48 fps, 30 & 60, 25 & 50. I’d also leave this at the default for a mix between 23.976 & 24, 24 & 25, and 29.97 and 30.
However, when frame rates are mis-matched, for example 24, 25 and 29.97 on a 24 fps timeline, switching to Frame Blending may yield better results.
Experiment and see what works best for you.
Traditionally, optical flow can yield amazing results, but those results can be VERY inconsistent. I would choose this option only when nothing else works.
One Response to When You Import Media Affects Project Frame Rates in DaVinci Resolve
“So make sure the first media you import has the frame rate you want to deliver.”
This is not correct. It matters how you’ve set the project frame rate, and it is true that you can’t change that after media has been imported, but it doesn’t matter what the frame rate of the media you import is as long as you ignore the option that pops up to change the frame rate with that first media you import.