Grouping is one of my most used features in DaVinci Resolve, especially in bigger projects where grades organization is a must. I use the grouping for two reasons:
I use groups in different ways, but the most common scenarios are:
Let’s create the first group. To do that right click on the clip you wish to add to the group and select Add Into a New Group:
Create a new group
Now, there’s an indication that the clip belongs to a group:
Link icon means that the clip belongs to group
Type in a group name and continue…
The green link in the right bottom corner will appear next to each clip that is assigned to any group.
Now, when we right click on any clip a context menu allows us to select the group that we have just created, and there are a couple of options:
When a clip is assigned to a group there are 2 additional fields in the combo box above the nodes:
This is where the magic happens. What they are and how to use them is explained in the next section.
I think that the best explanation is the visual one, so I created a simple graph that you can see below:
Group Editors structure
It shows the timeline with 4 clips on top. Then the signal goes through the Pre-Clip editor, which is common to every clip in the timeline and all the changes made there affect all the other clips. Then the signal splits into all the Clip node editors (every clip on the timeline has it’s own). Another common nodes are found under Post-Clip and then Timeline.
When I want to save a still to my gallery from the current grade and the current clip is in the group, then the thumbnail of the saved still will contain all the grades (pre-clip, clip and post-clip), but the actual grades stored in the gallery under this still will be only the ones from the current Node Editor (if we are in pre-clip node editor, only the nodes from that editor will be saved in the gallery).
To save all the corrections in the gallery use Collapse group grades described below.
This is a cool feature that flattens the group corrections to the Clip Node Editor level. This means that all the nodes from Pre-Clip will be inserted before all the existing Clip nodes, and all the nodes from Post-Clip will be appended after the existing Clip nodes.
Collapsed nodes
This is useful when I no longer want a particular clip to be in the group but I want to keep all the corrections.
I also use this to save still in the gallery as a preset for further grades.
Although groups give me flexibility and natural categorization of my clips in the timeline there’s but — the only disadvantage I find when using groups.
Group Pre-Clip and Group Post-Clip node editors don’t support caching. This means that placing heavy OpenFX plugins in the mentioned sections will slow down the performance and there will be no way to get the smooth playback back.
Caching options not available
Everything is just fine so long as I use LUTs and built-in corrections.
There’s a partial fix for that though. We can enable Output Cache and still get the realtime playback.
Render Cache Clip Output
Any change in the clip will break the cache obviously, but as long as we don’t touch the clip, it plays back instantly just fine.
Using groups in DaVinci Resolve might give you lots of benefits and speed up the workflow, but should be applied from the very beginning. Trying to split existing project into groups and extract the common nodes to Pre-Clip or Post-Clip might be impossible. Give it a go and see if it works for you.