![]() The fix in either case is to remove the new clip from the timeline, change the setting, and then put the clip back on the timeline. When I upgraded to a newer version of Resolve, a setting had changed and so during import of the clip a cropping was frozen. Because it is a compound clip it would not let go of the cropping that probably occurred because of a setting when the clip was put onto the timeline. So I think there are two possible causes. I can remove the one compound clip and put the two clips back onto the timeline. I took one of the two clips and put it on the timeline. Then I selected both clips to make a single compound clip. What I did is select the beginning of the sequence from the end of the shot and put that on the timeline, then I selected the end of the sequence from the beginning of the clip and put that on the timeline. I could just go back and renumber it, since I have a program I wrote to do just that. ![]() They are the same time lapse sequence, but the frame numbering started over again and so Resolve sees it out of order. It is two sets of raw images compounded to make the color settings apply to both. I was just reminded that this is a compound clip. ![]() Changing these settings seems to have no effect on the selected clip. The other options available under scaling are Crop, Fit, Fill and Stretch. If I turn it on the four options are defaulting to "Project Settings". When I select the clip and then double click on Retime and Scaling in the inspector, the four options are grayed out because Retime and Scaling is turned off.
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