Also, I tried saving my 1080 project to a 4k rez - 3840 x 2160 timeline. And then upscaling every clip on the timeline, then rendering it in the same 4k rez! I could barely get around. And when I went to export the project, it was rendering for 15 hours! I stopped it when I got up the next day with 5 hours left, because that was crazy. I want to render and review the edits. And I want to be able to realistically work with it. In the project settings in Davinci, you can select a lower quality for generating graphics when editing the video. One thing I'm learning is that for any processing intensive work, I make a project (ex - background surgery) to deal with clips one on one, render them, then remove them from the timeline of that project and do this for each clip I need to work on. Like taking a background out - takes a lot of processing and should be rendered out to put in the video instead of dealing with it on the timeline with 20 other clips. Then I can use them in the actual video I'm working with.
Shouldnt this only be done when the project is entirely complete? Or at least once the scenes are finalized? Was your preview set to quarter resolution as well?
@@mosdeaf yes, I was thinking about that. I’m very new to this. I’ve spent a lot of time in Pro Tools and a little in Premier. So you just work with smaller sized clips and get everything finalized, and then process everything to bring it up to size? I think that would take my computer 15 hours to run if I did it that way. I already tested. Doesn’t seem like an ideal solution. I also read that it’s better to start with highest quality because when you edit or color process, you’re not applying that to artifacts from bad quality clips.
@@BreauxBobby Not entirely understanding your situation. But you can wait to upscale your videos until after your editing. You can also generate optimized media with a right click. I'd deal with artifacting afterwards if it came up. Personally. Im no professional
@@mosdeaf do you mean setting up clips on the timeline? Maybe get the clips in order/arranged, make sure they are keepers, then upscale, then do edits like color correction, sharpening, lighting. You shouldn’t apply changes like that to low quality clips. But if you have a computer that isn’t keeping up with the load, you have to make some sacrifices regarding quality because it will be impossible to get the work done with upscaled clips, then edits.
@@mosdeaf Hey. I finished a video and upscaled in DaVinci. The upscaling of clips allows for upscaling specifically to the resolution of the clips. Some clips start with better resolution. Some are generated with lower resolution. Upscaling everything at the end is a compromise, but it's what I did in this case because I wanted to finish and move on to the next one - ruclips.net/video/6OUyXU3I0xg/видео.html.
Be aware that if you have shot a long clip like an interview then split it into pieces on the timeline (as you normally would in editing video) and try and apply superscalling to one of those pieces it will try to apply superscaling to all of them. Workaround: create a subclip of the part you want superscaled and apply superscaling to that.
Ahhh... Same thing here. I have a slow laptop. Here's what I've learned through experimentation. You could make a project for upscaling your video clips. Set the timeline to a 4k setting of your preference. Then bring the clips you want to work with into this staging project, one at a time. Go through and super scale each one, then render it. Delete the last one you just rendered from the timeline, then drag the next clip in and process it for upscaling, then render it. Repeat... Then make a project with the same 4k settings for your video. But the idea is to get all your clips upscaled before using them on your final project. I started with 1080 and I'm about 80% done. I then realized when I was rendering the video that the quality of some clips wasn't good. Now I'm using the 1080 project to find clips, put them into the timeline and get everything in place. Then I'm going back to recreate this in 4k as described here, by rendering upscales for the clips that will be in the video in another project individually. Then bringing them into a new project that's 4k that's the same as the 1080. If I had a faster laptop, I don't think I'd do it this way. Also, starting in the right timeline setting would be good. What do you think about this method? And do you have any ideas about how to do this?
Don't you need an incredibly powerful PC for this? I saw someone in the comments mention that their PC just stops working when they attempt it, even with 20GB of RAM. Another person said that this process takes hours. My PC has 32GB, but that doesn’t seem sufficient in this case. I’m guessing even the latest and greatest components struggle with this.
It actually requires a powerful GPU. Don't expect to playback the timeline at real time after this as its likely to crawl along. Thats why you should do this as one of the last steps before rendering out. TIP if you'vu apply this to a segment of a clip on the timeline it will actually try to superscale the whole clip whereever you've used it elsewhere on the timeline not just the segment you select. The workaround is to create subclip and apply it to that.
Of course, its one of the most demanding effects you can apply. This why you should do this as one of the final steps before rendering. And iif you have an RTX card in studio 19 you can select RTX superscaling which is faster
Straight to the topic!!!
Thank you!
@@davincimadesimple No, thank you
It only works on Studio / paid version. On the free version it put a huge Da vinci water mark on the Video 😑
Tried using watermark remover?
I didn't know this - sorry! :(
I havent
Sounds legal @@GhosTorque
@@jokybones dude the type of guy to remind the teacher of HW
But is it just as good as 4K native footage?
Not quite but close
Also, I tried saving my 1080 project to a 4k rez - 3840 x 2160 timeline. And then upscaling every clip on the timeline, then rendering it in the same 4k rez! I could barely get around. And when I went to export the project, it was rendering for 15 hours! I stopped it when I got up the next day with 5 hours left, because that was crazy. I want to render and review the edits. And I want to be able to realistically work with it. In the project settings in Davinci, you can select a lower quality for generating graphics when editing the video. One thing I'm learning is that for any processing intensive work, I make a project (ex - background surgery) to deal with clips one on one, render them, then remove them from the timeline of that project and do this for each clip I need to work on. Like taking a background out - takes a lot of processing and should be rendered out to put in the video instead of dealing with it on the timeline with 20 other clips. Then I can use them in the actual video I'm working with.
Shouldnt this only be done when the project is entirely complete? Or at least once the scenes are finalized?
Was your preview set to quarter resolution as well?
@@mosdeaf yes, I was thinking about that. I’m very new to this. I’ve spent a lot of time in Pro Tools and a little in Premier. So you just work with smaller sized clips and get everything finalized, and then process everything to bring it up to size? I think that would take my computer 15 hours to run if I did it that way. I already tested. Doesn’t seem like an ideal solution. I also read that it’s better to start with highest quality because when you edit or color process, you’re not applying that to artifacts from bad quality clips.
@@BreauxBobby Not entirely understanding your situation. But you can wait to upscale your videos until after your editing. You can also generate optimized media with a right click. I'd deal with artifacting afterwards if it came up. Personally. Im no professional
@@mosdeaf do you mean setting up clips on the timeline? Maybe get the clips in order/arranged, make sure they are keepers, then upscale, then do edits like color correction, sharpening, lighting. You shouldn’t apply changes like that to low quality clips. But if you have a computer that isn’t keeping up with the load, you have to make some sacrifices regarding quality because it will be impossible to get the work done with upscaled clips, then edits.
@@mosdeaf Hey. I finished a video and upscaled in DaVinci. The upscaling of clips allows for upscaling specifically to the resolution of the clips. Some clips start with better resolution. Some are generated with lower resolution. Upscaling everything at the end is a compromise, but it's what I did in this case because I wanted to finish and move on to the next one - ruclips.net/video/6OUyXU3I0xg/видео.html.
Keep up bro .We are with you.
Do I have to do something else to export it?
I have a video on how to export just search my channel. It’s one of my earlier videos.
IS this working on longer projects? Like an entire anime episode for example? I would get the pro version, of course.
i wouldn't see why not.
Be aware that if you have shot a long clip like an interview then split it into pieces on the timeline (as you normally would in editing video) and try and apply superscalling to one of those pieces it will try to apply superscaling to all of them. Workaround: create a subclip of the part you want superscaled and apply superscaling to that.
how i love when creator go ritgh to the point ... thanks :)
How can I do this in a multi-track project?
Ahhh... Same thing here. I have a slow laptop. Here's what I've learned through experimentation. You could make a project for upscaling your video clips. Set the timeline to a 4k setting of your preference. Then bring the clips you want to work with into this staging project, one at a time. Go through and super scale each one, then render it. Delete the last one you just rendered from the timeline, then drag the next clip in and process it for upscaling, then render it. Repeat... Then make a project with the same 4k settings for your video. But the idea is to get all your clips upscaled before using them on your final project.
I started with 1080 and I'm about 80% done. I then realized when I was rendering the video that the quality of some clips wasn't good. Now I'm using the 1080 project to find clips, put them into the timeline and get everything in place. Then I'm going back to recreate this in 4k as described here, by rendering upscales for the clips that will be in the video in another project individually. Then bringing them into a new project that's 4k that's the same as the 1080. If I had a faster laptop, I don't think I'd do it this way. Also, starting in the right timeline setting would be good. What do you think about this method? And do you have any ideas about how to do this?
Not working video quality 😢
But after doing this my machine stops working. With 20 GB. RAM i can not even change the tabs.
What are the specs of your PC ?
Awesome. Short & Sweet!
does this work for 480p??
Yes it should!
what's the editing softwear if I may ask?
erm it says it in video title incase you haven't read it
What if the video media itself is already compressed to low quality? Can it still be recovered to 4k using this method?
you mean ai like? no
Perfect, thank you very much.
Don't you need an incredibly powerful PC for this? I saw someone in the comments mention that their PC just stops working when they attempt it, even with 20GB of RAM. Another person said that this process takes hours. My PC has 32GB, but that doesn’t seem sufficient in this case. I’m guessing even the latest and greatest components struggle with this.
В данном случае от видеокарты очень многое зависит, не от оперативной памяти ❤
It actually requires a powerful GPU. Don't expect to playback the timeline at real time after this as its likely to crawl along. Thats why you should do this as one of the last steps before rendering out.
TIP if you'vu apply this to a segment of a clip on the timeline it will actually try to superscale the whole clip whereever you've used it elsewhere on the timeline not just the segment you select. The workaround is to create subclip and apply it to that.
Is this an AI based upscale?
Yes, requires a good gpu
i swear at 0:15 he says, "scroll down to 3840 ultra and click cocaine".
2x upscales 1080p to 4k. 4x is actually the equivalent of upscaling to 8k
ahh it shows a water mark over the video after - but it works..
Watermark can be removed! :D
@@davincimadesimple howwww?
@@stardreamix786 its simple, just but the studio version :))
@@BrokeSkull123 no, you Jew
easy enough
Mine suddenly lagging after doing it 😂
Of course, its one of the most demanding effects you can apply. This why you should do this as one of the final steps before rendering. And iif you have an RTX card in studio 19 you can select RTX superscaling which is faster
for studio not for free!
nice
It didn't teach anything... this is already a native feature of the Studio version!
Is it only in the studio version?
@@DCC4G yes...
Just showing everybody how to do it :)
there are tons of features in the software bro which many ppl find confusing.. in which he's helping thanks
@@the.mayukh And who cares what you think?
NOBODY