While it would otherwise throttle Resolve since it has to look at subsamples instead of regular frames, they’ve allowed the option to export the desired clip into their standalone plugin, do the necessary work, then automatically replace it inside Fairlight with a comp file that lays on top of the previous, untouched one. This is such a great point! And perhaps something that not only the editing team, but plugin creators and NLE providers should dive into as well.Īs an example, I absolutely love using Izotope RX for cleaning up dialogue for a mix and master session. He clearly didn’t ‘finish’ his prepared presentation, but I thought the actual disussion more useful. But a question came up pretty early on about plugins … and the rest of that presentation was simply Karl and several users talking about different issues and workarounds for plugins at various stages of the process. In the Adobe booth a NAB or two ago, Karl soule was giving a 20-minute talk on the then most recent changes in meta-handling available for long-format workflows/Hollywood work. So care with that work is of paramount importance. So the use of plugins is something that 1) needs to be discussed/negotiated from the start and 2) should only be done with the knowledge that it will likely require another generation of ‘original/working’ media in the project. Perhaps naturally, editors seem somewhat more unaware of their need to do this than vfx/audio/color staffers. Audio people with a ton of VSTs need to create replacement audio tracks for the sequences also.Īnd editors using plugins will also have to create replacement media. Like vfx people finishing their plates, then exporting out a full video clip to replace the comp or other placeholder/original media on the working sequences. Realistically, either they have to be ‘shared’ by all computers accessing the joint project, or … the users of them need to finish their work and create replacement media so that other users can do their work. One of the generally accepted (in practice, though not always public discussed) “rules” for large team working is the proper care and feeding of the plugins through the project. This issue is a huge thing in the major workflows with Premiere also.
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