DaVinci Resolve's free version is a full professional editor, color grader, and audio suite at zero cost, which makes it ideal for a budget FRC media team. This project takes you from raw clips to a published 60-second reel.
Step 1 — Project setup. New project, then in Project Settings set the timeline to 1920x1080 at a frame rate matching your camera (FRC field footage is usually 30 or 60fps). If your footage is 60fps, a 30fps timeline lets you do clean 50% slow-motion on climbs.
Step 2 — Organize on the Media page. Import all match clips, your photo gallery (Resolve can pan stills), and one music track you have the rights to use. Use only licensed music — the YouTube Audio Library or Pixabay (and Incompetech with attribution) avoid the copyright claims that mute, block, or demonetize your video.
Step 3 — Build the cut on the Edit page. Structure for a 60-second reel:
- 0:00-0:05 cold open: your single best scoring clip, no intro.
- 0:05-0:45 montage: 8-12 clips of 2-4 seconds each, cut on the beat of the music.
- 0:45-0:55 the payoff: your highest-scoring match or a clutch endgame, in slow motion.
- 0:55-1:00 outro card: team number, sponsors, social handles.
Use the blade tool (B) to trim, drag clips to reorder, and add a simple cross-dissolve only at the open and close — hard cuts on the beat feel more energetic.
Step 4 — Color and audio. On the Color page, use a manual lift/gamma/gain pass (or Resolve's automatic color tools) to make the field's washed-out footage pop. On the Fairlight (audio) page, duck the music under any natural crowd sound and aim for an integrated loudness around -14 LUFS, which is YouTube's loudness reference — mastering louder just gets turned down on upload.
Step 5 — Add captions. Use Resolve's Text+ or a subtitle track to caption any spoken audio. Captions are not optional polish — they make your video accessible and dramatically improve watch time on muted autoplay feeds.
Step 6 — Export. On the Deliver page:
- YouTube (16:9): H.264, 1920x1080, roughly 10-12 Mbps, AAC audio. The free version exports up to 4K, so 1080p is no problem.
- Instagram Reels / TikTok (9:16): duplicate the timeline, re-frame to 1080x1920, export H.264.
Render, upload, and cross-post the same reel everywhere with a caption tailored per platform. Keep the .drp project file in your team drive so next year's students can reuse your template.
Key takeaways
- DaVinci Resolve's free tier is a full editor that exports 1080p/4K H.264 — no paid software needed.
- Structure a 60s reel as cold open, beat-matched montage, slow-mo payoff, and a sponsor/handle outro card.
- Only use licensed music (YouTube Audio Library, Pixabay) to avoid muted, blocked, or claimed uploads.
- Caption spoken audio and target ~-14 LUFS (YouTube's reference) for accessible, consistent-volume video.
Go deeper
Lesson quiz
RequiredAnswer all 3 questions correctly to complete this lesson.
01.In the recommended 60-second reel structure, what belongs in the 0:00-0:05 cold open?
02.You're finishing a 60-second reel on the free version of DaVinci Resolve. What is the maximum delivery resolution the free version will let you export?
03.On the Deliver page, which codec and audio format should you use for your YouTube export?
Answer every question to submit.
All 29 lessons in Media, Branding & Outreach
- Not started:Mini-Project 1: A Repeatable Match-Day Photo Workflow
- Not started:Mini-Project 2: A 60-Second Highlight Reel in DaVinci Resolve (Free)
- Not started:Mini-Project 3: A CAD-to-Render Robot Reveal
- Not started:Mini-Project 4: A One-Page Press Release for Your Local Paper
- Not started:Mini-Project 5: Auto-Pull Match Results from The Blue Alliance API