![]() The workflow is completely different from Edit. It features a new dual timeline (an overview above and detailed timeline below) that eliminates the need to zoom. It can handle most basic chores, including importing, trimming, dissolves, titles, audio mixing and color matching, all directly from the timeline. With Resolve 16, Blackmagic Design introduced Cut, which is designed to fit better on a laptop screen and help YouTubers edit faster. However, you can program Resolve to work the same way simply by choosing Adobe Premiere Pro from the keyboard customization settings. Most editors rely on keyboard shortcuts to work efficiently, and, of course, they’re different in each app. And basic functions like setting trimming, cutting and inserting work in much the same way. Bins, effects, the timeline and source and record viewers are in roughly the same places. Resolve’s Edit space is surprisingly similar to editing in Premiere Pro. That’s without even talking about the extra cost of those apps. It’s faster and more convenient to do color correction, audio work and effects than it is to jump from Premiere Pro to After Effects to Audition using Adobe’s dynamic link system. I like that all the Resolve apps are bundled into one workspace. The same can’t be said about After Effects, for instance, which has a vastly different UI from Premiere Pro. The different Resolve apps have a similar look and feel, so it’s easier to learn the parts of the program. Media lets you organize your video, audio and other files, Cut is a new section designed for quick editing, Edit is where you assemble your show, Fusion is for compositing (roughly equal to Adobe After Effects), Color is for color correction, Fairlight is for audio editing and Deliver lets you export your final show.Īdobe Premiere Pro versus Davinci Resolve 16.2 shootout Davinci Resolve 16.2 color page It’s now divided into seven distinct workspaces. However, Resolve has made great strides in this area over the last few versions. It’s easy to switch to color correction and audio editing, and full Creative Cloud subscribers have access to advanced tools like After Effects, Audition and Photoshop. It has a deep feature set that many editors know and like, along with useful AI tools, decent media management and more. When it comes to the UI and editing features, Premiere Pro is hard to beat. (For a breakdown of the differences between Resolve and Resolve Studio, check here.) UI and editing ![]() However, I’ll be sure to mention any features available in the Studio version that aren’t available on the free Resolve 16.2 app. Software-wise, I’ve got a full (paid) Adobe Cloud subscription and license for the Studio version of Resolve 16.2. Both have 32GB of RAM, fast NVMe internal SSDs to run the program and relatively fast SATA SSDs for editing. I tested both on my Gigabyte Aero 15X laptop with quad-core Intel Core i7 CPU and NVIDIA GTX 1070 Max-Q graphics, as well as a desktop machine with an 8-core Intel CPU and NVIDIA RTX 2080 Ti graphics. I edit both at home and on the road, so I wanted to see how the apps performed on a decent laptop and high-end desktop machine.
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