One Simple Step to INSTANTLY Speed Up Your Documentary Editing

Want to speed up your documentary film editing and also get to know your footage better in one simple step? That’s exactly what this video is all about. Since I started my edits off this way I’ve become a faster documentary editor and at the same been able to see my story more clearly.
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CHAPTERS
0:00 - Intro
1:27 - Why this step is crucial when starting editing
3:15 - Definition of Dailies
5:42 - How to start cutting dailies
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15:38 - Why Should you do this
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Пікірлер: 184

  • @LucForsyth
    @LucForsyth11 ай бұрын

    What does your editing process look like? Have any hacks to speed up the job? Let me know! And don't forget to grab that sweet, sweet 70% discount on Audiio's royalty free music Pro Plan using the code Luc70: audiio.com/lucforsyth

  • @jaydelturco
    @jaydelturco11 ай бұрын

    20+ year editor here, this process is a must. Great video Luc! I like to take it one step further and group like clips together in my dailies and then use a track to drop a text title above those clips and name the title something related to the grouped clips instead of using the marker range. Then when you scroll through the timeline quickly you can see what the group is without needing to hover over a marker and can easily move the title with the clips if needed. I do the same thing for interviews and leave a note in the title that gives me the gist of what they said. It takes a little extra time but makes it so much easier to find what you need when you're weeks or months into a project. Any specific clips that I want to stand out I change the clip color and use the top three clip colors in Resolve (orange, apricot and yellow) as kind of a rating system. Again takes time but when you're dealing with hundreds or maybe thousands of clips, anything that makes it so you can scan through a timeline quickly and find what you need saves 10x more time during the edit.

  • @garuda909

    @garuda909

    11 ай бұрын

    Great tip, to add a text title for easy indexing/scanning !

  • @LucForsyth

    @LucForsyth

    11 ай бұрын

    That's a great tip Jay, thank you!

  • @mortystation

    @mortystation

    10 ай бұрын

    Specially usefull with interviews! First time I tried this was after sorting the footage from a videoclip. Most of the footage was from the band on their studio, so I divided my daily in band members. It made my life muuuch easier.

  • @hbmorris5558

    @hbmorris5558

    8 ай бұрын

    Great suggestions, Jay! I will absolutely put these to use.

  • @raksh9
    @raksh911 ай бұрын

    This is funny, but I've gone in the opposite direction. I used to create dailies reels but this became very time consuming. Now I edit interviews first and create a narrative. Then I look through folders of appropriate footage to find supporting visuals. This works because I'm a solo operator and have at least an idea of what has been shot. On rare occasions, I play with the dailies first and create sequences, but the story has to come first. Dropping all footage into a project eventually makes a project file unwieldy for the computer, so selecting which clip you want to include cuts down on project file size.

  • @RyanRhodes90

    @RyanRhodes90

    11 ай бұрын

    Amazing comment! I like this a lot. How do you sort through footage first so it’s manageable in the project file?

  • @raksh9

    @raksh9

    11 ай бұрын

    @@RyanRhodes90 Most jobs have a limited amount of subject material, which can be categorized according to location or activity. For example, shooting a chef doc would have footage of the interview, cooking, directing servers, maybe some market garden footage to find produce, exteriors of the restaurant or venue for establishing shots, etc. Shooting a sports team will result in a sequence of events like entering training, warm up, drills, game play, cool down, and so forth. Maybe you visit the subject at home, or out in a social event. Each shooting location or activity gets its own folder in the hard drive. Instead of painstakingly going through the rushes to make dailies reels, just look at the thumbnails so you know what's there. Then you listen to the narrative you created in the timeline and consider what footage will match it, then you find it in the folders. Because you've looked at your dailies to put them into folders, you know what is there. As you place footage, the visual story also takes shape. Sometimes you end up resequencing the narrative because the story flows better or you've discovered a better visual sequence that tells the story.

  • @williamfarnaby

    @williamfarnaby

    11 ай бұрын

    same here. also some suggestions based on several years of direct experience: 1. if you have to "find the story during editing" you (as a director) are in trouble. yes you can find unexpected gems during editing, but: you do need to work on research and putting together some kind of a story design so to have a map that will guide you through preproduction, filming and editing (and promotion + distribution actually). you need to know what the doc is about 2. if you shot 150 hours of footage to deliver a 15 min video you are a rookie filmmaker and need to hire a proper producer if you are considering an editing career: be clear that the editor/director relationship is (almost) everything for you so find a way to say no (graciously) to any director who can't answer to "what's this doc about? what's the story?" btw: story in its essence: situation, goal, obstacles/conflicts, stakes. you might want to read: The Practical Guide to Documentary Editing. good luck

  • @rosecoloma

    @rosecoloma

    2 ай бұрын

    @@williamfarnaby Wow this was so insightful! Thank you!

  • @petemellows
    @petemellows18 күн бұрын

    I’ve just finished and uploaded an interview I did a couple of weeks back. In the process of editing, I was just beginning to do similar techniques in Resolve. Because we touched on subjects in and off throughout the interview, I had to piece all of those together in separate bins and timelines. The best thing I learned, by accident, was that you can select all the timelines and create a new timeline out of those. THEN, editing the original timelines affects the master one. This saved me so much time and stress. I know this is an older video, but I love how it showed up just as my video went live.

  • @mlbreel
    @mlbreel11 ай бұрын

    I’ve avoided editing my personal project for several years now. I’ve been filming it for over twenty years now so it’s not just a film but rather my “ life’s work”. So, yes, I have to get past this stasis I’m stuck in or I’ll die with a lot of footage that someone will simply toss as pointless.

  • @fredventure

    @fredventure

    2 ай бұрын

    To not die with our art still inside us, that is the task of the artist! Get it out there, buddy!

  • @Bariom_dome

    @Bariom_dome

    29 күн бұрын

    Please do it. Find a partner to help you with that.

  • @EwenBell
    @EwenBell11 ай бұрын

    The Cut window in Resolve was a huge mystery for me when I first got started with editing. I didn't really understand it's value, and then we started working on some bigger projects and I bought the Speed Editor (as a bundle special with the studio license) and it changed everything. Saved as days and days of work in the long run, and now we have a super slick workflow. We don't touch a project until the Speed Editor has been dragged across the full set of footage, and we have extracted a master file of highlight cuts to begin the real process of editing. Great demo Luc, I hope lots of people are going to head this advice :)

  • @joenicklo
    @joenicklo11 ай бұрын

    Hell yes. One thing I want to add is...creating, printing and reviewing your transcripts. It's a bit old school but it's helped me a lot.

  • @LucForsyth

    @LucForsyth

    11 ай бұрын

    Great tip!

  • @carbon_originals
    @carbon_originals11 ай бұрын

    I saw another editor creating all the ‘selects’ and editing from there, and I have always done that. Never knew I was already making ‘Dailies.’ It’s the best way to know your footage, and find hidden gems within that give angles to your story you might have not considered.

  • @BT.MediaCT
    @BT.MediaCT4 ай бұрын

    I cannot express to you how much I love you chill, helpful, straightforward your videos are. This one helped me immensely. I'm struggling less with gear these days, and more eith pre & post production workflow efficiency & organization. This video showed me a lot of was I could have made my current project easier!

  • @glatznatureproductions
    @glatznatureproductions11 ай бұрын

    Super video Luc. Agree 100% with everything you said - and we learned a lot of this the hard way. The DR markers are very powerful. Love how they are customizable and you can add descriptions. I use a ton of keywords when organizing footage, which is then helpful when you bring everything on to the master. But I can see how the timeline of the dailies can be helpful as well. As you said the key is going through all of your footage, trimming away the fat, and organizing it relentlessly. Thanks for sharing your process and approach.

  • @BrianReyesFilm
    @BrianReyesFilm11 ай бұрын

    LUC!!! Thank you so much! This is literally going to save me a ton of time and stress! I already have the speed editor but I spend most of my time in the edit tab in Resolve. I never thought about making dailies and using that to organize and plan the story. I recently hired an editor because I felt soooo overwhelmed with the mountain of footage and I had no idea where to start, just as you stated in this video. I ended up spending the same amount of time fixing the problems in the videos than I would have spent if I had edited the videos myself. Thank you for this video. I feel like such a newb! 🤦‍♂️

  • @Brian-Hansen
    @Brian-Hansen11 ай бұрын

    Thanks Luc! 100% the way to do it. I can confirm that getting your footage out of bins and onto timelines is really the only way to handle a lot of footage.

  • @LucForsyth

    @LucForsyth

    11 ай бұрын

    It's the worst, but it has to be done!

  • @B-RollBooks
    @B-RollBooks11 ай бұрын

    Luc, you offer some of the most helpful videos I've encountered on KZread. I just wanted to take a moment to thank you for all the hard work you put into educating beginners like me. You're the best!

  • @spencers-adventures
    @spencers-adventures11 ай бұрын

    Really appreciate the thoughtful, in depth videos. Thanks for sharing, Luc!

  • @LucForsyth

    @LucForsyth

    11 ай бұрын

    You're very welcome, glad it was helpful!

  • @jamesharrison4272
    @jamesharrison427211 ай бұрын

    Luc ~ During the stringout phase I would suggest dropping markers on clips rather than the timeline. That way markers will transfer with the clips when moved to another timeline. Also taking the time to add a little metadata to 'keeper clips' along with clip markers aids searching and sorting.later. ... Another great vid.

  • @LucForsyth

    @LucForsyth

    11 ай бұрын

    Great tips, thanks James!

  • @VincentStevenStudio
    @VincentStevenStudio24 күн бұрын

    This works when you have plenty of time to edit. But for clients who want a quick turnaround, like 2 or 3 days. I'd rather go straight into it. I try to plan ahead while I shoot and pay attention to key moments live, so when I'm in the cutting room, I remember what to look for.

  • @DJWuTan
    @DJWuTan11 ай бұрын

    Really appreciate this youtube channel. Thanks for putting the time into each video. It's fun, thoughtful and well explained to someone who might not know alot about the film world. Thank you

  • @LucForsyth

    @LucForsyth

    11 ай бұрын

    Thanks, I appreciate you saying that!

  • @gtamediaproductions1
    @gtamediaproductions111 ай бұрын

    Davinci resolve is gold! I was a regular Adobe Premier user for the longest time and switched over to DR. Man I am so glad I made that decision! Thank you for this video by the way. It helps ✌🏻 I am a speed editor user now too. I use to use Edit controllers back in the analog days back in the eighties and it jut feels good using it.

  • @RogueWolfArtist
    @RogueWolfArtist11 ай бұрын

    Thanks for this vid, Luc. It is critical in fortifying the foundational process before I get into my documentary. Have a stellar week.

  • @LucForsyth

    @LucForsyth

    11 ай бұрын

    Thank you, same to you!

  • @MikeBabsBC
    @MikeBabsBC11 ай бұрын

    Hello from BC!!! Getting into Documentaries and Editing is the HARDEST part for me, thanks for this video!! i think this will help A LOT!

  • @BaoNguyen-yl7pn
    @BaoNguyen-yl7pn4 ай бұрын

    This workflow was specific to the needs of the doc style show I worked on but here was my workflow. - Put ALL B-Roll into one timeline - Then they are organized / grouped by scene - As I'm doing this I delete any footage that is 100% clearly unusable but like to keep everything else. - After all clips are grouped by scene then you order the scenes in chronological order - The scenes are then color coded. Do this for B-Roll and the interview footage so that if the interview footage is labeled a forest green color, you can go to the b-roll and quickly identify the related footage since it's the same color. - I never used a bright yellow/gold color for color coding scenes. I assigned that to a keyboard shortcut and used that color label to highlight the best 10/10 individual B-roll clips. These are the best shots that I know I want to use. It's also helpful for social media teaser edits since all the best shots are highlighted. - There is sometimes overlap between shots that can be used in more than one scene. In that case you can select the clip, color code the video with the primary scene it fits best into, and color code the audio for the other scene it could potentially work in. My show had minimal overlap so I would usually just be able memorize which shots could work in other scenes. But yeah no idea if anyone will ever even see this comment but it worked really well for me because the show was structured in a way that every scene was another location with it's own interview specific to that location and we never jumped back and forth so it was just one by one. So there was minimal overlap between B-Roll. In that case, this workflow worked beautifully.

  • @gabhoule
    @gabhoule11 ай бұрын

    How come I have sat down to make my first doc edit in Resolve an hour ago. What a PERFECT timing !

  • @LucForsyth

    @LucForsyth

    11 ай бұрын

    haha, destiny!

  • @orangejjay

    @orangejjay

    11 ай бұрын

    In Resolve no less. Scary! Haha. Hope it's going well, m8! 🎉

  • @dalapeterab
    @dalapeterab7 ай бұрын

    You are the best Luc! Thanks for all your amazingly inspiring tips and tricks you share! I´m truly so thankful for it, everytime I watch it. You are always spot on! /Peter

  • @ReadMoreSayLess
    @ReadMoreSayLess11 ай бұрын

    Awesome! Great job. Exactly what I needed. Not a professional. Beginner. No training. I would call this photography/editing theory. Where rough edges of the process are made smooth without the hours, headache or invention. More please. :) A hundred thanks. @lucforsyth Keep 'em coming.

  • @leftoverpopcorn
    @leftoverpopcorn11 ай бұрын

    Another great video! You give great context and buildup to see the potential how can this help my method too. Thank you Luc!

  • @LucForsyth

    @LucForsyth

    11 ай бұрын

    Thanks, very glad it helped!

  • @rickmagnell
    @rickmagnell11 ай бұрын

    Great overview of dailies! I’ll be using some of these tips for my upcoming doc!

  • @mediurs
    @mediurs11 ай бұрын

    I have the loupedeck + for more than 2 years now. It speeds up my workflow about 60%. So, I completely understand your points.

  • @GlobalShutterNY
    @GlobalShutterNY11 ай бұрын

    Great approach to starting the edit - always the toughest part! Davinci Resolve makes this process even a bit easier using the Cut Page's 'Source Tape' - that lets you play through all of your footage without having to worry about advancing shot by shot... (And yes - Resolve Rules - having a single program that can do it all from edit to color and sound allows you to tweak all parts of the production without having to transfer from program to program - making tweaks and fine tuning much more seamless!)

  • @LucForsyth

    @LucForsyth

    11 ай бұрын

    Oh really...this is very good to know - thank you!

  • @johnclay7644
    @johnclay764411 ай бұрын

    informative video Thanks Luc.

  • @LucForsyth

    @LucForsyth

    11 ай бұрын

    You're welcome John!

  • @stevenpitts376
    @stevenpitts37611 ай бұрын

    I always start at the beginning. Each step of my hike I'll take footage tell I get to where I'm hiking to. Start from the first shot tell I reach the end makes it easy

  • @mychalsimmons4177
    @mychalsimmons417711 ай бұрын

    I love your channel doc......very honest helpful and kool

  • @AdamMurtland
    @AdamMurtland11 ай бұрын

    Thanks for the video! If you haven't already, try using the "Source Tape" function between Source Clip and Timeline in the upper left corner of your viewer in the Cut page. It aligns all the Broll within your bin end to end so you can just scrub through setting ins and outs and inserting without ever touching your mouse to change clips until the very end. Speeds things up soooo much.

  • @LucForsyth

    @LucForsyth

    11 ай бұрын

    so helpful! Hands off the mouse for this whole process is the goal!

  • @charlieross-BRM

    @charlieross-BRM

    11 ай бұрын

    OK, that explains what was happening when I was working in the cut page. I couldn't figure out why it seemed to be jumping to the next clip when I wasn't finished with the previous clip. My fat fingers. I have a little tab of velcro on my F9 key as my tactile helper so I correctly press that to put the trimmed segment at the end of the chain while keeping my eyes on the monitor. F9 is a bit of a finger stretch from JKL.

  • @adamleaders
    @adamleaders11 ай бұрын

    Great video. I go about it a little differently with the speed editor. Sort of the opposite of you. I drop all of the footage into the dailies timeline and as I quickly scrub through I discard what I don't need using the split and ripple delete or trip in/out. Then color code scenes. It's so fast, I fly through hours of footage. Awesome tip on dropping in music.

  • @LucForsyth

    @LucForsyth

    11 ай бұрын

    Seems like a different approach to end up with the same thing…nice!

  • @stefanoguardia

    @stefanoguardia

    11 ай бұрын

    I make the same... Is 10x faster Try this Luc.

  • @simonanne_com
    @simonanne_com11 ай бұрын

    Great stuff, finally learned the meaning of a few words 😊 thanks! About the fan noise, that should be pretty easy to fix in Resolve? Voice isolation usually takes care of it

  • @LucForsyth

    @LucForsyth

    11 ай бұрын

    Haha, you’re right!

  • @joshwhitee
    @joshwhitee11 ай бұрын

    Welcome to the world of the speed editor! It obviously makes the process of cutting faster but its also just fun once you get into the flow with it. I picked mine up a while back when I also switched to resolve. Also, didn't get a chance to chat at AOD's film fest but I'm sure we'll cross paths on set at some point 🤙

  • @LucForsyth

    @LucForsyth

    11 ай бұрын

    Hey Josh, sorry we didn't meet! was a really cool event though, see you next year!

  • @OREO959
    @OREO95911 ай бұрын

    That enter key though haha I dig it!

  • @PawFromTheBroons
    @PawFromTheBroons11 ай бұрын

    Speed Editor and Source Tape are like a super power.

  • @Relativizor
    @Relativizor8 ай бұрын

    The key thing is that you get a review process going, and that you never stop organizing the clips you have. You need to watch all of your unedited footage in order to start making experimental timelines of "selects". Timelines impose a clip ordering which is crucial for story formation, but how quickly you want to move there is perhaps an individual choice. I often start like you do by cutting an initial timeline, adding "cue card" titles in between categories. The outputs of this process are that we get to review all the rushes and that we get to create small patches of a story. Then I tend to add meta-data to the clips that went into the timeline. Generally, the goal is to add a bit more meta-data every day, but keep focus on timeline creation. Typically, the cue cards ends up as a story outline. Taken in isolation, they form a representation of the rushes in distillation. As you watch your rushes, you generate more of these small cards, which you can push into a timeline for planning, or you can pull them into a non-linear text writing tool such as scrivener. This allows you to create new timelines in a one-to-one relation with the cards, selecting and editing the footage for each section. Assembly follows naturally. This workflow embraces the idea that rushes are non-linear in nature, and it works bottom-up rather than top-down. As you assemble more and more pieces, the overarching story will form. This story formation process is what imposes linearity in the content ultimately leading to a final cut.

  • @CreativeTies_
    @CreativeTies_11 ай бұрын

    Oh boy the way you feel about editing reflects my own experience so we'll, it's crazy 😅 On my current projects I just do complete string outs without even setting in/out points that helps me remove decision fatigue when I just want to get started. While reviewing I just put cuts at good sections. Recently I had a shoot tho where interview and B-roll flow into each other within the same clip and I'm not quite sure how to deal with that yet .

  • @LucForsyth

    @LucForsyth

    11 ай бұрын

    Haha, I guess no matter what we do it’s going to feel like that…just have to get it going and eventually it gets less painful

  • @Fuegoshotz
    @Fuegoshotz4 ай бұрын

    (Rough draft of thoughts) Dope, I gotta start doing this. Usually I just start with the media page then find my first clip and go from there, then edit it how I want. I don’t use folders but I probably should because then I can categorize on my Clips. I also got a mouse with extra buttons and mapped them to davinci so I can cut, delete, copy, paste and save. The only part that takes forever is figuring out how to edit the whole video and cutting down clips. Also finding music takes forever. I’ll actually start by finding a song or already know what I’m looking for but most of the time I have to search for the best song to go with the project. Another part that stops me is creative block and being overwhelmed with a lot of footage.

  • @joepvanuden3913
    @joepvanuden391311 ай бұрын

    I have the exact same edit setup. Not only the gear but the way we work. Pretty cool considering i thought it myself.

  • @LucForsyth

    @LucForsyth

    11 ай бұрын

    Great minds think alike!

  • @graphikeye
    @graphikeye11 ай бұрын

    This was really helpful. Sorry if this is a dumb question, but do you then just copy / paste the clips from the daily timeline into the master or is there a more efficient way to reconcile the various timelines?

  • @timdanyo898
    @timdanyo89811 ай бұрын

    FCPX has an incredible keyword and smart collection system that makes dailies making and clip search incredibly efficient. It speeds up doc film work 10 fold.

  • @LucForsyth

    @LucForsyth

    11 ай бұрын

    Nice...I know people who like it a lot as well!

  • @meyerdigitalfilm
    @meyerdigitalfilm11 ай бұрын

    I make markers wnd text to all interview Questions so i can go thru my index and puzzle it together or i can get fast feedback from my customers for specific parts 😊

  • @HumanSpeaker
    @HumanSpeaker11 ай бұрын

    What keyboard do you use? Love the click sound of it!

  • @daoudconsumption
    @daoudconsumption10 ай бұрын

    This could not have come at a better time

  • @bubblesculptor
    @bubblesculptor11 ай бұрын

    The Speed Editor is like a samurai sword to just slice thru footage quickly!

  • @jojo_bxd
    @jojo_bxd11 ай бұрын

    Nice content luc! I thought the pen at the thumbnail was a joint! hahaha

  • @LucForsyth

    @LucForsyth

    11 ай бұрын

    🇨🇦🍁

  • @HeadBangerExtreme
    @HeadBangerExtreme11 ай бұрын

    I like to use a lot of bins! This is because I like to edit with thumbnails/story board mode. I keyword my footage generally so I can also use the search function. I can golden flag any gold clips, and green flag clips I’m not too interested in but could be good for story reasons. For clips that have different shots in them (can’t tap the record button for example) I can set in and out points and just use subclips. Any problems with my method / tips for improvement? Are there things the timeline method is better at? I feel good about this so far, but maybe I’m just scratching the surface?

  • @nonamemcgee4842

    @nonamemcgee4842

    9 ай бұрын

    I do something very similar, however, I'm still new and adapting my workflow.

  • @mortystation
    @mortystation10 ай бұрын

    Once the dailies are done I like to start my raw footage using "panckackes". I will place my raw suquence in the botton of my workspace and the other sequence(s) on top of. Idealy you want to be working with a source monitor, program monitor and you "pancakes" underneath. Once you are done with dailies,cmarked it and got familiar with your footage, it is super easy to throw the right in/out selections form the upper pancakes to your raw, scene... whatever

  • @LucForsyth

    @LucForsyth

    10 ай бұрын

    great tip!

  • @meyerdigitalfilm
    @meyerdigitalfilm11 ай бұрын

    I ripple edit all my footage in my timeline, pretty similar to your technique. Its all about momentum 😅😊

  • @erbartlett
    @erbartlett11 ай бұрын

    any tips for organizing huge b-roll libraries? i end up using lots of footage from previous projects, so i'm rarely just using the new footage i shoot.

  • @LucForsyth

    @LucForsyth

    11 ай бұрын

    I would do exactly the same thing - make dailies of all the stuff and keep them in one project. I’d probably organize by theme and keywords rather than shoot day if it’s really big

  • @closetotheedit1561
    @closetotheedit15618 ай бұрын

    I think the most important thing to do, is to understand the structure of your film/doco. Then you can work out how to organise your rushes. Ultimately it’s going to be organised in to bins that represent the structure of the documentary itself. And you can reorganise as you go… after, all the programme will change as it forms! Just organising in a way that helps you to remember where footage is. I’m not sure B-roll on timelines is a better way to know your rushes in itself, but it’s another way. The key here, is to train your memory and know how to manage a jigsaw puzzle in your mind.

  • @karllautman
    @karllautman11 ай бұрын

    Thanks for another great video, Luc. Have you ever explored any of the many editing peripherals for Premiere Pro (e.g. Loupedeck and TourBox) that provide functionality similar to Speed Editor?

  • @LucForsyth

    @LucForsyth

    11 ай бұрын

    You're welcome! I have seen a lot of them advertised and some of them look great. My main gripes with premiere are about the subscription plan and sluggishness, so the speed editor is only a bonus - not the main reason I'm thinking of jumping ship

  • @flochfitness
    @flochfitness11 ай бұрын

    Today I learned that you can split a marker and have it span across multiple clips 🤯

  • @Kirkgilchrist_TLF
    @Kirkgilchrist_TLF10 ай бұрын

    @lucforsyth may I ask which 90 degree cable you run for your Sennheiser shotgun?

  • @JeremyGreysmark
    @JeremyGreysmark11 ай бұрын

    Interesting video :) What mechanical keyboard are you using? It seems to have a mac layout, so I was just wondering what it is :)

  • @elmegade3
    @elmegade311 ай бұрын

    Liked this video after hearing Luc's first sentence. That happens to me all the time!!!

  • @LucForsyth

    @LucForsyth

    11 ай бұрын

    I think it happens to all of us, every time!

  • @joshdiditt
    @joshdiditt11 ай бұрын

    Would love to see you strap a Gopro on and talk us through a live POV b-roll capture in the field. These shots you have look great, even in Log you can tell the compositions are great.

  • @LucForsyth

    @LucForsyth

    11 ай бұрын

    Great idea! I'm planning another BTS shoot in a couple months, so I'll try and keep that in mind

  • @MayurMahapatraFilms
    @MayurMahapatraFilms11 ай бұрын

    I use fcpx.. and o think it’s easier for me to just folders outside fcpx and just grab me to the fcpx and they will appear as you wanted, all organised.

  • @EdwardKilner
    @EdwardKilner7 ай бұрын

    Place on top vs Append? This process per scene? Really? This was a valuable video. Subscribed

  • @mossgatherer_
    @mossgatherer_11 ай бұрын

    Have to laugh at how cheery you are about a dark pit of existential despair 😅

  • @christuusgnosis
    @christuusgnosis11 ай бұрын

    If u don't have the lovely device, totally remapping the numpad is the next option to sit and crunch for hours. I enjoyed your commentary because of the lingo, I learned a lot of terms and resolve has also saved me from the horrifying 'cloud' of Adobe.

  • @LucForsyth

    @LucForsyth

    11 ай бұрын

    Good tip! Remapping keys is a huge help for editing for sure - maybe a topic for a future video!

  • @wildpatagoniafilms16
    @wildpatagoniafilms1611 ай бұрын

    Great post.. totally agree! Editing per say is beautiful.. but the 'organizing of the media" is the boring part & a headache! But is a MUST! I never use the "cut" page... probably I should try it! Once you ensemble the cut page with the clips you like...if you move to the "edit" page... that same organization within the edit page timeline remains? thanks!

  • @LucForsyth

    @LucForsyth

    11 ай бұрын

    yes, you just open that timeline on top of your main edit and start picking shots!

  • @wildpatagoniafilms16

    @wildpatagoniafilms16

    11 ай бұрын

    @@LucForsyth thanks! cheers!

  • @charlieross-BRM

    @charlieross-BRM

    11 ай бұрын

    What I found was that if I start directly on the editing timeline, like I've been doing out of habit through several systems since 2002, it's too easy for me to get tempted with editing individual clips and arranging them as a working sequence, getting ahead of myself. If I stay on the Cut page I'm focused on the task at hand so I'm much quicker. Stay on task and it's "one and done" for cutting.

  • @RogueWolfArtist
    @RogueWolfArtist11 ай бұрын

    I suppose keyboards are like brownies: some of us like’em chunky, others like it smooth. I enjoy keys of quiescence, but totally get the appeal of the audible response to each action.

  • @LucForsyth

    @LucForsyth

    11 ай бұрын

    it's like ASMR for me...but to each their own for sure!

  • @rezjrprod
    @rezjrprod10 ай бұрын

    Audiio charges extra for festival and commercial correct?

  • @stennythomas3994
    @stennythomas399411 ай бұрын

    You can use dialogue isolation in resolve to easily get rid of that fan noise in one click!!

  • @LucForsyth

    @LucForsyth

    11 ай бұрын

    It's the best! I'm actually putting together a full resolve video just on these best features, so let me know your top favourites

  • @stennythomas3994

    @stennythomas3994

    11 ай бұрын

    @@LucForsyth tops would probably be relight, dialogue isolation, automated transcriptions, think they have false color as well!

  • @mrjohnbaseley
    @mrjohnbaseley11 ай бұрын

    @0:14 Made me actually laugh out loud ! Thanks.

  • @stevenrast4261
    @stevenrast426111 ай бұрын

    So glad your switching to Resolve. You just obviously need a M2 Mac Studio 😊

  • @LucForsyth

    @LucForsyth

    11 ай бұрын

    Haha, definitely. Silly me getting the last intel MacBook….

  • @JoeyZervoulakos
    @JoeyZervoulakos11 ай бұрын

    New Subscriber here!! Nice info !! Could you do a video on what you can film for Documentaries? sometimes i get stuck. Thanks bro!!

  • @LucForsyth

    @LucForsyth

    11 ай бұрын

    Like in terms of what subjects you can film? I like the idea, but the answer is literally everything!

  • @KurtRatliff
    @KurtRatliff11 ай бұрын

    Love my speed editor! Check out the “source tape” feature in the cut page - saves even more time because you don’t have to jump from clip to clip, you can make your dailies even faster, Resolve for life!

  • @LucForsyth

    @LucForsyth

    11 ай бұрын

    I keep hearing about this, I definitely will! Thanks!

  • @cruisechill1813
    @cruisechill181310 ай бұрын

    A better way to do this is to compound the cut down clips then you can put them into folders based on categories

  • @hbmorris5558
    @hbmorris55588 ай бұрын

    Luc, two questions: 1. In this video, you've used 5 seconds of those b-roll shots as clips you lay down in the timeline. But cataloging the "magic moment" shots from an interview is a different thing. You wouldn't just shoot a few seconds of an interview and call it good. You'd actually clip key pieces of each interview and string those on the timeline, right? In some ways, it might have been a bit more compelling to show how you handle that process rather than clips of largely static b-roll shots. Even in those b-roll shots, what probably should end up on the timeline might include key camera moves or other parts of those shots, not just the first 5 seconds. Do I have this right? 2. My section question is about the use of transcripts, notably transcripts now created easily within Premiere Pro. It seems like the new tools available enable you to produce an organizational component to these dailies that transcends just the visual, but meaty content from interviews and other shots that include speaking. I remember working on a huge corporate project and taking key interview bits and jotting them down on 3x5 cards. I would then pin these in sequence on the wall so I could start virtually assembling the cut. Can you discuss your process in this regard?

  • @thegamer7141
    @thegamer714110 ай бұрын

    The intro is me currently 😂😂

  • @raajpratapsinghthakur
    @raajpratapsinghthakur11 ай бұрын

    THANKYOU FROM INDIA❤❤

  • @LucForsyth

    @LucForsyth

    11 ай бұрын

    You're welcome from 🇨🇦!

  • @mychalsimmons4177
    @mychalsimmons417711 ай бұрын

    Where do you save your dialog ans folli sound

  • @pedrogama-escamafilms
    @pedrogama-escamafilms11 ай бұрын

    Great video! And your computer will explode 🤯🔥😆

  • @LucForsyth

    @LucForsyth

    11 ай бұрын

    It hates me for sure...silly me getting the last Intel model of MacBook

  • @Ryzza5
    @Ryzza511 ай бұрын

    Seems like you forgot to use the Source Tape feature, worth looking at.

  • @WhySteve
    @WhySteve11 ай бұрын

    And this is why I haven't edited my showreel yet... because I have no idea where to start haha. Time to start making dailies for "good shots". Man, I really want to buy resolve but our currency just halved in value, so resolve doubled in price over night :(

  • @LucForsyth

    @LucForsyth

    11 ай бұрын

    It’s free! You only have to pay for the studio version, but 95% of the functionality is free

  • @WhySteve

    @WhySteve

    11 ай бұрын

    Yeah, I know, I use resolve, but I want studio so I can export larger than 3840x2160, NR and a couple of camera tracking tools in fusion haha. 😄

  • @EwanLim
    @EwanLim11 ай бұрын

    after 20 yrs of doing documentaries, I can confidently say that a real documentary filmmaker’s place is in the toilet crying under the shower for your regularly scheduled existential despair. That and realizing that you should’ve done a travel series instead of doing an investigative documentary. (rant) Then after doing that travel series after that investigative docu, u work on human interest stories for a a news channel so that u’ll leave the office at 6pm and not am but then u win an award for an action short film because u got bored in between human interest stories.

  • @unexpectedvistas6198
    @unexpectedvistas61983 ай бұрын

    I just wish blackmagic would do some minor qol tweaks to keywords. I know people are used to timelines and flags, but i think in keywords to perform a similar process that endures outside of a single project.

  • @garuda909
    @garuda90911 ай бұрын

    Great video Luc! I am a hobbyist and been using Vegas Pro for my personal projects. In the last few weeks I started dabbling with FCP and Davinci, and liking both of them as well. Planning to get the Blackmagic Speed Editor hardware to make it a very tactile, fun experience to edit! In Davinci, would it have been easier to use the "Source tape" for your use case? Or did you think it is far more easier and precise to work with each different shot separately? Also, my other thought was, if I have whole bunch of B-roll and a lot of Primary footage, I was wondering: 1) I use what you did here to clean up my B-roll to the essential shots 2) In my primary timeline where I have my A-roll (say, and interview with a business owner), what is a good technique to use these cleaned up B-roll elements to put on top of my A-roll timeline for quick overlays? (As the business owner speaks, I may want to show a cut away of the railway tanks ).

  • @garuda909

    @garuda909

    11 ай бұрын

    When I say "Source tape", I meant the "Source tape" feature in the "Cut" screens, where all of your source will line up next to each other, to enable the editor to quickly go over the entirety of all the shots with iN and OUT points as one scrubs along, and adding/appending them to the timeline!

  • @garuda909

    @garuda909

    11 ай бұрын

    I see @GlobalShutterNY suggested the same "Source tape" feature down below!

  • @LucForsyth

    @LucForsyth

    11 ай бұрын

    I'm just learning resolve myself, so the source tape thing is new for me - and I'm 100% going to do that next time! I would lay the a-roll first, then when it's in the right order I'd open up the b-roll timeline and just start layers shots where they make sense.

  • @uy.studios
    @uy.studios11 ай бұрын

    Wait were those clips shot in Saskatchewan?

  • @LucForsyth

    @LucForsyth

    11 ай бұрын

    Yep - conquest!

  • @mulwajevin
    @mulwajevin11 ай бұрын

    Might just start using DaVinci Resole

  • @LucForsyth

    @LucForsyth

    11 ай бұрын

    I'm liking it more and more! But the same steps apply to any editing program

  • @Blunttalkz2.0
    @Blunttalkz2.03 ай бұрын

    You should do voice over work

  • @richc.3100
    @richc.310011 ай бұрын

    👍 😎

  • @RogueWolfArtist
    @RogueWolfArtist11 ай бұрын

    The first thing I’d think to do when shooting a documentary is the triple-back up. 😎

  • @LucForsyth

    @LucForsyth

    11 ай бұрын

    haha, can never go wrong with the triple back up!

  • @sneakingelephant
    @sneakingelephant11 ай бұрын

    That initial hurdle is definitely the hardest for even doing KZread videos.

  • @LucForsyth

    @LucForsyth

    11 ай бұрын

    The worst.

  • @nibopunyo
    @nibopunyo23 күн бұрын

    Cannot see your subtitles during , “ shooting dailies “ because your shirt had white logo which was making it difficult to see what’s written in the caption and the subtitles is also white coloured so .. just a small feedback still i thought it would help you in improving and not making the same mistakes again

  • @GRUBB-MUDD
    @GRUBB-MUDD10 ай бұрын

    Why not final cut

  • @travelexplorer
    @travelexplorer11 ай бұрын

    I made my channel specially to practice that issue

  • @Bariom_dome
    @Bariom_dome29 күн бұрын

    I´m at that stage: I do not know where to start. And the deadline is in three days.

  • @bridgevisionfilms
    @bridgevisionfilms3 ай бұрын

    I wish this wasnt a hidden promo for that random device but thanks anyways

  • @raccofang3033
    @raccofang303311 ай бұрын

    2:22 dub meme que😂

  • @unexpectedvistas6198
    @unexpectedvistas61983 ай бұрын

    Lol, you are slipping the sponsor in nicely 👍

  • @Moonninja420
    @Moonninja4206 ай бұрын

    You know it's bad when you have to say you're not paid by dmagic.

  • @pmedinua
    @pmedinua5 ай бұрын

    2:21 No Hay Plata 😅

  • @xalibas
    @xalibas11 ай бұрын

    Incredibly helpful content. Thanks for that. To be honest i was a little disheartened after watching the 5th video in which you mention about your f-stop back pack. Sorry for the unsolicited piece of advice, but keep it relevant to your audience

  • @LucForsyth

    @LucForsyth

    11 ай бұрын

    You're very welcome! But I'm confused...how is a camera pack not relevant to a filmmaking channel?

  • @xalibas

    @xalibas

    11 ай бұрын

    @@LucForsyth it is. But you made some 5 videos in which you use the backpack as content. Doing this you lose relevance to the people who follow you for the sake of putting out content. Channels which keep recycling content for the sake of content may accumulate a lot of subs along the years but viewership is relatively low because it doesn’t resonate anymore for all but the newcomers

  • @LucForsyth

    @LucForsyth

    11 ай бұрын

    Got it! I can only talk about the stuff I use, and I keep my stuff for a very long time so there’s bound to be some repetition, but I appreciate the feedback!

  • @CAMAS_7
    @CAMAS_711 ай бұрын

    What’s with the bear logo?

  • @LucForsyth

    @LucForsyth

    11 ай бұрын

    Haha, don’t really know myself anymore. Started as a joke, now it’s just sort of there!

  • @CAMAS_7

    @CAMAS_7

    11 ай бұрын

    @@LucForsyth at first I thought it was a Chicago cubs hat. It’s a cool logo, I’ve just been wondering about it

  • @killll
    @killll4 ай бұрын

    this 20 min video could easily be 2 minutes long