- #HOW TO MAKE TITLE LAST LONGER IN DAVINCI RESOLVE MAC OS HOW TO#
- #HOW TO MAKE TITLE LAST LONGER IN DAVINCI RESOLVE MAC OS FULL#
Click on the “Call Out” node and you’ll see a bunch of options open up in the Inspector along the right side of the UI.Whenever you click the Fusion tab in DaVinci Resolve, it will open up the Fusion nodes for whatever element is in the top-most track your playhead is over. Hover the playhead over the “Call Out” and go to the Fusion tab.If you double-click this it will insert it into your Timeline, but it might not go to the right track, so click and drag instead to get exact placement. In the Effects Library, navigate to Toolbox > Titles > Fusion Titles.Now, in the upper left of your UI, click on the tab for “Effects Library” if it's not already active.So hover over the left-hand side of your Timeline and Rt-click, then select “Add Track” Rt-click on the Timeline and make a new track, similar for subtitles but this one is just an empty track.Here’s the simplest way I’ve found to set up labels that skips some of the steps from those tutorials.
#HOW TO MAKE TITLE LAST LONGER IN DAVINCI RESOLVE MAC OS HOW TO#
There are two great tutorials out there I’ll recommend for setting up labels (see references below, they’re the ones with asterisks), these tutorials describe how to build labels from scratch, so check them out if you want maximum control over the look and feel of your text elements. While it’s annoying you have to remember to do this every time you export, it’s also pretty cool that DaVinci Resolve automatically gives you the option here of turning off or exporting the captions instead to a sidecar file like an SRT, because this means that with this Export Subtitle option, you can turn off captions for the entire video with one click! When your project is ready to export, in the Delivery tab, make sure you remember to check on the “Export Subtitle” option, and set the Format to “Burn into Video”.When you want to add the next caption, you can either stretch out the first one and cut it using the Blade tool (B) or the keyboard shortcut (Ctrl+B on PC), and then change the text content in the new subtitle clip.Adjust the width and height sliders, and other sliders as well if you want to really customize the appearance.To add this in DaVinci Resolve, check on the “Background” parameter.