User Manual

Table Of Contents
DaVinci Resolve Mini Panel
The Mini control panel has an identical feature set and controls as the Micro panel for the lower
trackball deck. In addition the panel has an upper sloped desk with dual high resolution LCD
displays with four soft knobs and keys that are menu driven. There are also two banks of control
buttons, on the left hand side for palette selection and on the right hand side for commonly
used operations.
Please refer to the Micro panel details above for the lower deck features.
Palette Selection Buttons
On the left hand side of the top deck you will find 15 palette selection buttons. To quickly select
the main palette toolsets in DaVinci Resolve simply select the appropriate button and the
menus on the LDC screens will update to the correct display.
Palette selection buttons
Home: This key is used for the initial setup of the panel and also selects the top-most
menu. Additional palettes in DaVinci Resolve without their own direct access button will
be available here in future releases.
Left Arrow: A number of menus have multiple pages as indicated by the small dots in
the center of the LCD displays. The left arrow moves the menu display left.
Right Arrow: The right arrow moves the menu display right.
Raw: This palette contains groups of parameters that correspond to every camera raw
media format that’s supported by DaVinci Resolve.
Primary: The first grade for every clip will be likely be a primary. This is where you
balance the clip and correct for offsets in the black and white balance. Selecting
Primary switches DaVinci Resolve from other grading modes and automatically selects
the Primary menus for the LCD displays.
Motion: The Motion Effects palette (only available in the Studio version) contains two
sets of controls for applying optical-flow-calculated effects to clips in your program.
These include enhanced Spatial and Temporal noise reduction, and motion-estimated
artificial motion blur.
Curves: The Curves palette has six modes that provide different curve-based methods
of manipulating the color and contrast of an image. Each curve lets you adjust a
customizable region of the image based either on image tonality (zones of lightness or
darkness), hue (specific colors), or saturation (intensity of color).
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