Ok, welcome back and welcome to another DaVinci Resolve 10 tutorial.
This is going to be a quick one, hopefully just a couple of minutes if that, and this
one is going to look at making or creating a classic kind of bleach bypass kind of look
that you can do with pretty much any file.
It's really quick, it's really easy, so let's just get started on doing that.
What else is quite useful in DaVinci is this obviously white balance is off, so it's very
yellow and we've seen that in previous ones, obviously previous tutorials we colour corrected
this and did some other stuff to it, but in this case we're just going to do a really
quick auto kind of correction, I'm not going to go through and do it myself, and if we
see at the bottom left corner here, there's a little A in a circle, if we hit that after
we made our node, so if I make my new node here, this is my colour correction node, and
I hit A, it does a very quick auto correction, now I mean there's stuff that's not right
with it, but it's a basic white balance auto correction, so I mean I'm not particularly
happy, I want the skin tones to be warmer and maybe push the background to a kind of
blue kind of effect like we've done in some of these other clips here, see we've got kind
of blueish background, but the skin tone looks quite warm, and the hair looks black, shirt
looks pretty black, glasses look black, he stands out a little more, whereas this is
kind of a bit off, a little purple I guess kind of in here is a little purple, but I'm
not fast because this is a really quick one, we're only going to do a quick tutorial looking
at the beach bypass, so I'm going to make another node which is Alt S, and what we can
do is if I right click on these, you see we've got the outside nodes, so if I was looking
at skin tones, obviously I could create the outside node and work with this outside which
is quite good, I can also add mattes which could be quite useful, now what else you've
got is up in your nodes section is you've got a layer node, the shortcut key there for
you, Alt L, so if I create a layer node what we get is we get this underlying node which
effectively in regards to the image is actually going on top of the image, so it's not underneath
like the node is, it's actually on top, so if we move it around then that's how the image
would look, is we've got the color version underneath, so the layer node on top of it
and then this is obviously making up our final node, this is the mixer, so this is mixing
this one and this one, so what we want to do obviously to create the bleach bypass you
kind of look is we're going to desaturate all of this top layer by going down to our
saturation here and just insert zero, and there we see it goes to zero, so it's now
black and white, now the layer mixer is obviously all black and white as well, and then all
we need to do to create this bleach bypass look is right click on this, see we've got
here a few options and we've got a composite mode and our composite mode to create that
look is just we hit overlay and there we have it, so obviously that is very quick bleach
bypass kind of look, now if you want to go back and you know maybe you'd want to pull
the skin tones a little bit, make them a bit warmer, maybe push the background a little
bit, kind of into a sort of a bit bluey shade, might look quite nice, but again it just depends
on what you're kind of aiming for I suppose, but that is a very quick tutorial, hopefully
that's only in about 2 or 3 minutes on how to create that sort of classic bleach bypass
look in DaVinci Resolve, alright and then oh quick one as well, if you want to save
this as a power grade in essence you can just grab a still on it and dump that still into
your power grade and there it is, that will hopefully stay in your gallery as well, so
if you go to your gallery there it is, so I've got 2 in there now so that's my classic
one in there, if I go back to this as well and I dump this into my fixed gallery up here
so these would be what we call our memories in here, you've got your memories and you
can do an export, so I can export this whole thing with an LUT display and then obviously
I can dump that into my power grade and it kind of create preset, so if I want to go
into another project and then insert this as a preset, bleach bypass, that's all I have
to do, very easy, very simple, anyway that was just a little extra one for you all to
enjoy, alright great have a good day, enjoy whatever you're doing and I will speak to
you and see you soon.
