Aurora Timelapse Editing Pipeline 北極光縮時攝影視頻製作流程
Timeline 4 Disolve Film+Optical Flow+Dehaze0 S.4.mov
Workflow B (Hybrid) — Aurora Timelapse Editing Pipeline
(DaVinci Resolve Studio + Single Optical Flow Pass + Optional Topaz Later)
Goal
Create a smooth, visually satisfying aurora timelapse from still photographs while avoiding compounding motion artifacts. The workflow relies on short Cross Dissolves for temporal continuity, followed by
one single Optical Flow / Speed Warp pass on the final rendered clip. An optional Topaz Video AI pass may be applied later for further refinement.
Part 1 — DaVinci Resolve Studio (Primary Assembly & Blending)
1) Import & Build the Timeline
• Import aurora still images into the Media Pool.
• Place images on the timeline in sequence.
• Set or confirm still duration (e.g. 0.5s per still) so overall playback speed matches your intended timing.
2) Apply Cross Dissolve to All Adjacent Stills (Batch)
• Set
Cross Dissolve as the default video transition.
• Set transition duration to
0.15–0.20 seconds (recommended for aurora motion).
• Select all still clips in the timeline (Ctrl + A).
• Apply the default transition to all edit points (Ctrl + T).
Result: short dissolves reduce hard discontinuities while preserving aurora structure.
3) Color & Basic Finishing
• Perform primary color correction and grading to maintain consistent sky brightness and color across the sequence.
• Apply only mild noise reduction if needed; avoid aggressive spatial smoothing.
• Avoid heavy sharpening at this stage to prevent exaggerating interpolation artifacts later.
Part 2 — Single Optical Flow / Speed Warp Pass (Resolve)
Purpose
Introduce smoother apparent motion by generating intermediate frames
only once, after the edit is complete, without stacking multiple interpolation stages.
4) Render a Resolve Master (Pre-Interpolation)
• Export the completed timelapse (with Cross Dissolves applied) as a high-quality master file.
• Use a high-bitrate, low-compression codec (e.g. ProRes, DNxHR, or high-quality H.264/H.265).
5) Re-import & Apply Optical Flow / Speed Warp
• Re-import the rendered master clip into a new timeline.
• Select the clip and open the Inspector.
• Enable retiming if required (slight speed reduction or frame expansion).
• Set:
–
Retime Process: Optical Flow (or Speed Warp, hardware permitting)
–
Motion Estimation: Enhanced Better / Speed Warp
• Do not apply Optical Flow to individual stills—this is a
single, global pass only.
6) Render the Optical-Flow-Enhanced Master
• Export this version as your primary “smooth motion” master.
• Inspect carefully for warping or deformation in fast aurora bursts.
Part 3 — Optional Topaz Video AI Pass (Future Enhancement)
When to Use
Use Topaz Video AI later if additional smoothness, temporal stability, or AI-assisted motion refinement is desired beyond what Resolve Optical Flow provides.
How to Use (Best Practice)
• Feed Topaz the
Optical-Flow-enhanced master from Resolve.
• Apply AI interpolation and/or enhancement in
one single pass only.
• Typical target: 24 / 30 / 60 fps delivery with improved continuity and reduced flicker.
Why This Hybrid Workflow Works
• Cross Dissolves handle discontinuities cleanly and predictably.
• A single Resolve Optical Flow / Speed Warp pass adds controlled motion continuity.
• Optional Topaz processing extends smoothness without compounding artifacts.
• Each motion-synthesis step is applied once, preserving aurora structure and realism.
Output Strategy
• Keep three versions when possible:
1) Resolve Master (Cross Dissolve only)
2) Resolve Optical-Flow-Enhanced Master
3) Topaz-Enhanced Master (optional)
This preserves flexibility for future reprocessing or alternative delivery needs.
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DaVinci Resolve Studio v20 — Transition Plug-ins & Comprehensive Tutorials (HTML Summary)
Part A — Getting “Cinema Dissolve”-Like Transitions in DaVinci Resolve
1) Key Point (Why You Don’t See “Cinema Dissolve”)
DaVinci Resolve does not include Adobe Premiere Pro’s “Cinema Dissolve” preset by name. However, Resolve supports expanding its transition library via:
- Templates (Fusion-based transitions installed into Resolve’s Templates folders)
- OpenFX (OFX) Plug-ins (professional plug-in suites that add transitions and effects)
- Custom Fusion Transitions (you can build your own “cinematic” dissolves in Fusion and reuse them)
2) Free Transition Packs (Template-Based)
These are convenient “download + install” options for adding more transition variety beyond stock dissolves:
Typical Installation Pattern (Template Packs)
Exact steps can vary slightly by pack, but the common approach is:
- Download the pack (often includes .setting, .drfx, .comp, or template folders).
- In Resolve, locate the appropriate templates folder (many vendors provide a “how to install” PDF or page).
- Copy the provided files/folders into the specified Resolve directory.
- Restart DaVinci Resolve so the new transitions appear in the Effects Library.
3) Paid, Professional-Grade Options (OpenFX Plug-ins)
If you want transitions that feel more “cinematic” (enhanced dissolves, glow/blur/film-style blends, light-based transitions, etc.), consider OFX suites:
-
Boris FX Continuum
Large professional suite with many transitions and finishing tools, compatible with Resolve as OFX.
Open Boris FX Continuum
-
Boris FX Sapphire
High-end stylized effects and transitions often used for cinematic looks, compatible with Resolve as OFX.
Open Boris FX Sapphire
4) Create a Similar “Cinematic Dissolve” Yourself (Fusion)
If you want a dissolve that feels closer to “Cinema Dissolve,” you can build a Fusion transition using:
- Blend/Dissolve + subtle film-style blur
- Glow or halation-like highlights
- Film grain overlay (very light)
- Optional light-leak layer at low opacity
You can then save it as a reusable transition/template inside Resolve.
Part B — Comprehensive Tutorials for DaVinci Resolve Studio v20 (Online + PDF)
1) Official Blackmagic Design Training (Best Starting Point)
Blackmagic Design provides free official training resources including downloadable PDFs and project files.
Open Official DaVinci Resolve Training Page
2) Official PDF Training Books (Project-Based, Free)
Common “core set” many users follow:
- The Beginner’s Guide to DaVinci Resolve 20 (foundation, end-to-end workflow)
- The Editor’s Guide to DaVinci Resolve 20 (editing tools and professional editing workflows)
- The Colorist Guide to DaVinci Resolve 20 (color correction and grading)
- The Fairlight Audio Guide to DaVinci Resolve 20 (audio post-production in Fairlight)
- The Visual Effects Guide / Fusion Guides for DaVinci Resolve 20 (Fusion compositing and VFX)
These are typically linked on the official training page above, along with downloadable lesson materials.
3) DaVinci Resolve v20 Reference / New Features PDFs
Useful for lookup and for learning what changed in v20:
- DaVinci Resolve Reference Manual (full feature documentation; often large, used as a reference)
- DaVinci Resolve 20 New Features Guide (what’s new in v20, upgrade-oriented)
4) Online Video Tutorials (Free)
If you learn best via video, search for “DaVinci Resolve 20 complete beginner tutorial” and select long-form lessons that cover:
- Project setup and media management
- Edit page trimming and timeline building
- Transitions and effects
- Color page basics
- Fairlight audio basics
- Delivery/export settings
5) Paid, Structured Courses (Optional)
If you want a curriculum-style course and more systematic mastery:
Suggested Learning Path (Practical)
- Beginner’s Guide PDF (complete a few projects end-to-end)
- Editor’s Guide PDF (tighten trimming, transitions, and timeline technique)
- Colorist Guide (build reliable grading workflow)
- Fusion / VFX Guides (only after you are comfortable with Edit + Color)
- Fairlight Guide (audio polish and finishing)