
Scenario 2: Your color correction / mastering environment does NOT match the delivery / viewing environment.For example, your mastering environment is set for broadcast and you’re delivering for broadcast. Scenario 1: Your color correction / mastering environment matches the delivery / viewing environment.Why a can of worms? Because you have to consider not one but two different scenarios for setting your gamma: It’s a great question – but opens a can of worms when it relates to setting your gamma on your reference display and the various options in DaVinci Resolve. What color & gamma settings should I use in FCPX & Resolve when it’s going either to the internet or onto DVD’s? We recently had a question come in about a common source of confusion: If you need to alter the appearance of a batch of titles at the same time, you can copy the source style via cmd/ctrl-C and then "paste attributes" to multiple destination titles via alt/opt-V.Tutorials / Gamma 2.2 vs Gamma 2.4 – How, Why and When (in DaVinci Resolve)? How do you set up DaVinci Resolve for different Gamma settings (and why)? Use these as your templates/presets, it helps to rename them accordingly. Define the settings you want for each style on independent titles on the timeline, then drag a copy of each look from the timeline to the media pool. I'd recommend "Text+" over the legacy "Text" which doesn't offer any advantages. If all you want to do is control the appearance of two different styles of text, use the "Title" category of tools, located in the effects library, not the subtitle track. It's the same reason you can't choose English and Spanish on your television at the same time. You won't be able to use two tracks at the same time in any software, because you can't display two languages of captions at the same time within current broadcast television standards. Resolve is advanced in this respect, with support for updates via supplemental IMF and DCP, so that film and broadcast studios don't need to re-export entire programs whenever they need to make minor corrections. To add a second subtitle track, right-click in the track header and select "add subtitle track." This is used for language localization, so that you can deliver different caption versions for the same program. Resolve does support multi-track subtitles.
