Some good advice here but one major mistake that you have made demonstrating the dry/wet mix. Don't touch (slap wrists 😊) the bus fader unless you really have to, instead you should be using the channels Bus Sends to control the amount of wet effects being heard. Pull the send down in volume or pull the slider to the left side to reduce the amount of wet effort (reverb) on any channels that you want some amount of reverb on. The idea of using an Bus Sends is so the same effect can be used for many track/channels without having to load it on every channel. In the analogue mixing days that would mean you would only have to buy one reverb effect unit to use on many channels instead of one unit for each.
This is very true. Sorry about that! I actually need to double check, but I’m not sure that Resolve lets you automate the send itself, which is why I used the fader.
I’ve watched it twice so far; invaluable information. Thanks Jay
Excellent
Some good advice here but one major mistake that you have made demonstrating the dry/wet mix. Don't touch (slap wrists 😊) the bus fader unless you really have to, instead you should be using the channels Bus Sends to control the amount of wet effects being heard. Pull the send down in volume or pull the slider to the left side to reduce the amount of wet effort (reverb) on any channels that you want some amount of reverb on. The idea of using an Bus Sends is so the same effect can be used for many track/channels without having to load it on every channel. In the analogue mixing days that would mean you would only have to buy one reverb effect unit to use on many channels instead of one unit for each.
This is very true. Sorry about that! I actually need to double check, but I’m not sure that Resolve lets you automate the send itself, which is why I used the fader.