Thanks for the video! Really appreciated! Newbie in DaVinci. Could you pls clarify the real use/utility of having a "cross fade" we can see at the end of the dialogue and the music tracks? Many thanks, once again!
Hi and welcome! Yes I tend to put a fade out to -3 db at the end of my audio tracks because it gives a nice gradual fade out. I prefer it to just dragging the handle at the end on the audio clip down as that only fades to 0 so it’s not as smooth a fade as using the fade out effect. It’s just a preference particularly for music. When cross fading between multiple audio clips on different tracks I tend to just use key frames as that’s pretty fast. Hope that helps, thanks.
Hi, yes I tend to have all my audio channels in stereo including dialogue as it's simple and easy to work with. Stereo is definitely useful for sounds effects as you can pan the channels left and right to create more atmosphere and make it feel like the sounds are coming from different directions, similar to a surround sound effect.
In the industry, vocals are processed in mono because they mix in 5.1 or 7.1 and the front speaker displaying vocal channels is mono@@Renclif but I get the point, it can be useful for certain artistic choices
Ok, thanks that's great to know. My audio knowledge is limited as I've never worked with 5.1 or 7.1, the commercial video productions I've worked on have only required stereo sound and basic audio editing. But if I ever get to work on a feature or some short film for the big screen I'd like to learn how to work with 5.1 for sure. @@pedro-bx3tq
Thanks for this my friend. Very useful
Thanks for all your support my friend, you're a legend! Have a great day!
Thanks for the video! Really appreciated!
Newbie in DaVinci. Could you pls clarify the real use/utility of having a "cross fade" we can see at the end of the dialogue and the music tracks?
Many thanks, once again!
Hi and welcome! Yes I tend to put a fade out to -3 db at the end of my audio tracks because it gives a nice gradual fade out. I prefer it to just dragging the handle at the end on the audio clip down as that only fades to 0 so it’s not as smooth a fade as using the fade out effect. It’s just a preference particularly for music. When cross fading between multiple audio clips on different tracks I tend to just use key frames as that’s pretty fast. Hope that helps, thanks.
@@Renclif Yeah, thanks for all the assistance!
Thanks for this, very helpful
So glad you found it helpful, thanks!
Thanks for the tips.
Glad to help any time, thanks for dropping by!
good job my friend👍2
Thankyou my friend, I'm glad it was helpful!
Nice very helpful, I'd also be interested in seeing the video you edited, is there a link?
Hey thanks man, sorry it's just some sample footage for this one so no link unfortunately!
Dialogue in stereo??
Hi, yes I tend to have all my audio channels in stereo including dialogue as it's simple and easy to work with. Stereo is definitely useful for sounds effects as you can pan the channels left and right to create more atmosphere and make it feel like the sounds are coming from different directions, similar to a surround sound effect.
In the industry, vocals are processed in mono because they mix in 5.1 or 7.1 and the front speaker displaying vocal channels is mono@@Renclif but I get the point, it can be useful for certain artistic choices
Ok, thanks that's great to know. My audio knowledge is limited as I've never worked with 5.1 or 7.1, the commercial video productions I've worked on have only required stereo sound and basic audio editing. But if I ever get to work on a feature or some short film for the big screen I'd like to learn how to work with 5.1 for sure. @@pedro-bx3tq