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DaVinci Resolve 21 Adds Photo Editing and AI Search Tools

Blackmagic Design has announced a major update to its professional video editing and color correction software, DaVinci Resolve, including a new Photo page that aims to streamline image reframing and cropping.

DaVinci Resolve 21 Photo page
DaVinci Resolve 21 extends the application's color grading toolset to still photography for the first time, meaning photographers can now apply primary color correction, curves, qualifiers, power windows, and node-based edits to stills, with changes held at the original source resolution. An additional LightBox view displays whole albums with grades applied, and Sony or Canon cameras can be tethered for direct capture into albums.

Unsurprisingly perhaps, much of this update centers on AI. A tool called IntelliSearch indexes media so editors can search for objects, spoken keywords, or specific faces. Meanwhile, CineFocus lets users shift a shot's focal point after recording and add bokeh, while a set of facial tools can age or de-age subjects, reshape features, and remove blemishes.

Two further additions, UltraSharpen and Motion Deblur, are aimed at salvaging soft or blurry footage.

Elsewhere in the app, keyframing gains four-point Bezier easing and the ability to adjust multiple clips at once, and Fusion effects can now be tweaked directly from the Cut and Edit pages. Text handling also picks up multi-language spell check, a font browser, emoji support, and character-level styling. The Cut page now has smart bins, while a new MultiMaster trim manager lets colorists generate multiple HDR and SDR deliverables from a single timeline.

Resolve 21 also introduces native support for OGraf HTML graphics and Lottie animations, so users can now drag .json and .lottie files directly into the media pool, where they will be treated like fully rendered animation clips. There's also a Picture in Picture effect, and expanded IntelliScript support for Final Draft and plain text screenplays. See the press release for further details on all the improvements and changes.

DaVinci Resolve 21 public beta is available now to download for free from the Blackmagic Design website, but we're still waiting for a general release date to be confirmed.

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Top Rated Comments

cjsuk Avatar
8 weeks ago
Hoping this might be my way out of Adobe's death grip.
Score: 19 Votes (Like | Disagree)
nostaws Avatar
8 weeks ago
Still bummed that apple let aperture die. This could be a good thing for still image photographers. The key will be in the photo/file managment as much as the creative tools.
Score: 10 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Lee_Mac Avatar
8 weeks ago
After cancelling my Adobe Lightroom and PS subscription this is excellent news. Better go get the update :)
Score: 9 Votes (Like | Disagree)
cateye Avatar
8 weeks ago
here, let me save us all some time and summarize this thread:

Professionals: "This is great, however I would need to evaluate the features and capabilities of this software carefully against my existing workflow. I would never upend my technology stack without cause. Cost for professional software is negligible compared to revenue generated, so price is not a real concern."

Everyone else: "I need to die on the hill of how much I am paying and whether or not it's a subscription. Also, subscriptions, grr. grr. grr. Aperture, in the old days, I take photos of my cat, etc. Man, subscriptions."

;)
Score: 8 Votes (Like | Disagree)
DHagan4755 Avatar
8 weeks ago
DaVinci Resolve 21 is quite the impressive update.
Score: 6 Votes (Like | Disagree)
cateye Avatar
8 weeks ago

So, let me see if I get this right: non-professionals who want to do some photo editing should tie themselves to an ecosystem which costs them more money for less, in order not to be mocked by a random user on MR. That's a really rational decision, yes.
Nope, not at all. If you missed my point or my satire, then perhaps that's my fault and I apologize, but I'm actually on your side here. The reality being, as professionals, we evaluate the tools we use against a host of factors, including capabilities, flexibility, development pathway, and even the inertia of workflow and knowledge. "Pricing models" comes somewhere after "what color is the icon."

Yet the more time you spend here, the more targeted the software may be at professionals, the more likely the chief complaint will be "it's too complex" or "I don't like the pricing model."

Put another way, in a world where Apple Numbers and Google Sheets exists, people will insist on buying Excel to use at home, and then rush to MacRumors to complain about how complex or expensive it is.

The problem isn't the software.
Score: 5 Votes (Like | Disagree)