



I see some basic CC controls in Fusion but would prefer to do so in the color page…I suppose the workaround is to color grade the individual clips, render them out, and bring them back into Fusion the “traditional” way…then apply the delta matte created with the un-color corrected clip to this new graded clip. (Green screen shot courtesy of Abba Shapiro After you start exploring Fusion, share your thoughts in the comments section, and happy compositing!įor a finished composite I’d definitely want to color match the foreground and background elements independently. Once we’ve gone over those fundamentals – you learn how to use Fusion to complete a real-world green screen comp. Using the finished Fusion comp in the edit and color pages.Adding nodes (or, as they are called in Fusion, “Tools”).How monitoring works in Fusion (which is different then the rest of Resolve).This insight is an introduction to Fusion and how it fits into Resolve, so you will understand how to get in and out of the Fusion tab, and how the UI works compared to what you are already used to in Resolve. In my second Resolve 15 insight, I want to give colorists who haven’t dived into Fusion yet a good foundation to start really exploring it. Fusion 101 Even though Fusion is node-based, it’s GUI and functionality may seem a bit foreign to colorists who haven’t used Fusion or similar software While it is node-based, just like the Resolve color page, a lot of other aspects of Fusion don’t work the same way colorists are used to. If you have never used a node-based compositing application, Fusion may seem a bit strange or foreign to you. Traditionally, color tools have been dedicated to a single task: color grading. I worked for years on Avid|DS – so the concept of jumping between an editing, color grading, and node-based compositing with graphics and paint – all in one app, just feels like home to me.īut I know for a lot of colorists – Fusion may have come as a bit of a surprise. When Blackmagic announced they were fully integrating Fusion into Resolve, I was overjoyed. Tutorials / An Introduction to Fusion in DaVinci Resolve 15 A Colorists Guide to the Fusion Node Tree & Workflow
