Become an Expert With These 5 DaVinci Resolve Shortcuts

DaVinci Resolve shortcuts can simplify your workflow. Resolve stands as a cornerstone in the realm of video editing, revered for its robust capabilities and user-friendly interface.

Widely adopted across the film industry, from Hollywood blockbusters to independent productions, DaVinci Resolve has earned its popularity due to its comprehensive feature set tailored for professional-grade editing, color correction, visual effects, and audio post-production—all integrated seamlessly into a single platform.

One of the key reasons behind DaVinci Resolve’s widespread use in movies is its powerful color grading capabilities.

The software offers advanced color correction tools that allow editors to achieve precise color adjustments, ensuring the visual tone and mood of a film are meticulously crafted.

Moreover, DaVinci Resolve’s ability to handle high-resolution footage and complex projects efficiently makes it a preferred choice among filmmakers.

In this blog post, we’ll delve into five indispensable DaVinci Resolve shortcuts that can elevate your editing proficiency and streamline your workflow.

DaVinci Resolve shortcuts that you might not know

Copy & paste grades without stabilization

The stabilization settings get copied and pasted when you copy color grading from one clip and paste it to another.

This can make your clip look wobbly.

You will have to stabilize each clip again, which will take some time.

Let me tell you a way to copy and paste grades without stabilization to save you time.

On the color page, copy the color grade of a clip by pressing cmd+C on your keyboard.

Click on the clip on which you want to paste the grade.

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Go to the keyframe button on the bottom right and select color.

Now, press cmd+V to apply the copied grade without stabilization.

Clip filtering

When you’re working on a project with multiple clips, and multiple gradings, this feature will come in handy.

It lets you sort different clips in a very simple manner.

davinci resolve shortcuts, clip filtering in resolve

To use this feature, go to the color page and click on Clips.

In the drop-down menu, you will see different options to filter your clips.

You can filter clips by – ungraded clips, modified clips, color, keywords, noise reduction & so much more!

Also Read: How To Add Glowing Text in Resolve

Reduce exposure/highlights of only the overexposed areas

At times, you would want to decrease the highlights or pull up the shadows of a specific area in your video.

If you try to do this with the highlights slider directly, the value of highlights will affect the entire clip and not a specific area.

You should mask out the area to apply the changes only to it.

The conventional long way to do this is by using a qualifier, and adjusting the luminosity till you get a clean selection of the desired area.

The shorter way to do this is with the help of HDR color wheels.

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Go to the High Dynamic Range – Color Wheels and then to the highlights.

Click on the small circle on the left of the wheel to view the HDR extremes in your clip, i.e., the overblown highlights and the crushed shadows.

Remember to turn the masking view on to see which area is being selected, do this by clicking on the button highlighted in the screenshot above.

Also Read: Speed Ramp In DaVinci Resolve EXPLAINED In Just 4 Steps: Create Stunning Videos

Create your shortcuts in DaVinci Resolve

Did you know you can make customized shortcuts in DaVinci Resolve?

Other than the ones built into Resolve, you can create shortcuts as per your liking.

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Go to DaVinci Resolve in your menu bar and select Keyboard customization.

You can either change hotkeys for existing in-built shortcuts, create new shortcuts, or replicate your shortcut keyboard from another software like Premiere Pro.

For example, you can see in the screenshot above, that I have set a new shortcut for Quick Export using the tab button on the keyboard.

To replicate a keyboard from another editing software, go to the dropdown menu at the top-right of the window. Select the program from which you want to replicate your keyboard layout.

importing keyboard shortcuts from premiere pro in davinci resolve

List of 30 in-built basic keyboard shortcuts

  1. Cut: [Ctrl/Cmd + X]
  2. Copy: [Ctrl /Cmd + C]
  3. Undo: [Ctrl/Cmd + Z]
  4. Redo: [Ctrl/Cmd + Shift + Z]
  5. Paste: [Ctrl/Cmd + V]
  6. Paste Attribute: [Alt/Option + V]
  7. Select All: [Ctrl/Cmd +A]
  8. Deselect All: [Ctrl/Cmd + Shift + A] 
  9. Save: [Ctrl/Cmd + S]
  10. Save As: [Ctrl /Cmd + Shift + S]
  11. New Bin: [Ctrl/Cmd + Shift + N]
  12. New Timeline: [Ctrl/Cmd + N]
  13. Import Project: [Ctrl/Cmd + I]
  14. Export Project: [Ctrl/Cmd + E]
  15. Deselect all tracks: [Ctrl/Cmd+Shift+A]
  16. Trim: [T]
  17. Blade: [B]
  18. Razor: [Ctrl/Cmd + B]
  19. Pointer: [A]
  20. Insert edit: [F9]
  21. Overwrite edit: [F10]
  22. Replace edit: [F11]
  23. Delete: [Backspace]
  24. Dynamic trim mode: [W]
  25. Trim mode: [T]
  26. Edit point type: [U]
  27. Snapping on/off: [N]
  28. Split clip: [Ctrl/Cmd + (+) ]
  29. Join clip: [Alt/Option + (+) ]
  30. Add transition: [Ctrl/Cmd + T]
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Garima Bhaskar
Garima Bhaskar
Articles: 282

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