Editing Video in DaVinci Resolve – Adding Stills & Clips Without Losing Your Mind
There comes a moment in every video project where you sit back, look at your footage, and think:
This needs something… but what?”
That “something” is often cutaway clips, still images, or overlays — and this is where DaVinci Resolve really shines.
Why Add Stills and Extra Clips?
If your video is just one long talking head… people switch off.
Adding visuals:
- Breaks up the monotony
- Reinforces what you’re saying
- Keeps attention (especially online learners)
- Makes you look far more professional than you actually feel
In teaching videos (especially science), this is gold:
- Show the experiment
- Zoom into the apparatus
- Add diagrams or results
- Overlay graphs or equations
Adding a Still Image (The Easy Win)
Steps:
- Import your image into the Media Pool
- Drag it onto the timeline (above your main video if you want it as an overlay)
- Adjust the duration by dragging the edges
-
Use the Inspector to:
- Resize
- Position
- Add a gentle zoom (Ken Burns effect)
Tip: A slow zoom makes still images feel like video — otherwise it can feel a bit “PowerPointy”.
Adding Cutaway Clips (B-Roll Magic)
This is where the magic happens.
Steps:
- Place your main footage on Track 1
- Drop your cutaway clip onto Track 2 (above it)
- Trim it to cover awkward edits or pauses
- Keep your original audio running underneath
Result:
Your mistakes disappear
Your video feels intentional
You look like you planned it all along
(We both know you didn’t — but no one else needs to know that.)
Timing Is Everything
The biggest mistake?
❌ Leaving images on screen too long
❌ Or flashing them too quickly
Rule of thumb:
- 2–5 seconds for most visuals
- Match visuals to what you're saying
- Change something every few seconds to keep engagement
Useful DaVinci Resolve Tools
- Inspector → resize, crop, zoom
- Transform controls → position overlays
- Cross Dissolve → smooth transitions
- Cut page → fast edits
- Edit page → precise control
Teaching Tip (From the Lab)
In your science videos:
- Show the real experiment
- Cut to a diagram
- Then back to you explaining
This creates a loop:
See it → Understand it → Apply it
And that’s where learning actually sticks.
Final Thought
Editing isn’t about cutting clips…
It’s about telling a story visually.
If every image, clip, and overlay answers:
“Will this help someone understand better?”
…you’re doing it right.

