User Manual

Table Of Contents
Absolute Ripple: Changes made to the current clip are rippled to the specified clips
by the same delta of change, using whichever units make sense for the affected
parameter. For example, if the current clip had a Lift of 0.80 and you increased it to
0.90, each rippled scene’s master gain level increases by 0.10. Identical to the “Unit
value changed” ripple setting.
Forced Ripple: The current clip’s grade is rippled to the specified clips in its entirety,
overwriting all previous nodes and parameters in the rippled clips.
The adjustment you made in step 4 is applied to the designated range of clips.
Admittedly, that was a long and detailed procedure, but the actual button sequences are
straightforward once you put them together. Here are some examples of button sequences that
ripple an adjustment you’ve just made in different ways:
“10, 15” then SHIFT DOWN then RIPPLE VALUE: Copies the change you’ve made to
the current clip, and applies it as a new node that’s appended to the end of clips ten
through fifteen.
MODES then RIPPLE MODES then “34, 45” then FORCED RIPPLE: Copies the entire
grade of the current clip, using it to overwrite the grade of clips 34 through 45.
MODES then RIPPLE MODES then “–, +” then SHIFT DOWN then RELATIVE RIPPLE:
Copies the change you’ve made to the current clip as a relative percentage, and
applies it as a new node appended to the end of every single clip in the entire Timeline.
WARNING Once you ripple a change in this manner, there is no going back. Since
undo is a per-clip operation, there is no global undo for changes made to the entire
Timeline. Proceed with caution.
Chapter – 131 DaVinci Resolve Control Panels 2957