User Manual

Table Of Contents
Sample Editing
You can zoom quite far into audio clips on the Fairlight page timeline, until you see the
individual samples that comprise the audio waveform of each clip. Samples are represented by
control points once you’ve zoomed in far enough.
When you zoom in far enough, you can see the individual samples of an audio clip as control points
You can non-destructively edit these control points to eliminate clicks and pops, and to effect
other fixes to problem audio clips.
Methods of editing audio samples:
To see the editable audio samples: Zoom all the way into an audio clip until you see
the sample control points, using either Command-Plus or Command-Minus, the scroll
wheel of your pointing device, or by holding down the ZOOM button of your Fairlight
editing panel and turning the JOG/EDITING wheel.
To edit a single audio sample: Click and drag that audio sample up or down to change
its height.
To edit a section of samples: Click and drag horizontally left or right across the
samples you want to edit to “redraw” the waveform any way you’d like.
Black points show the previous levels when samples have been edited in a clip
Sample editing can be undone, just like any other editing procedure, as the edited sample
points are stored non-destructively within the DaVinci Resolve project.
Chapter – 154 Editing Basics in the Fairlight Page 3232