With a familiar interface consisting of a timeline, monitor window, and a media pool, anyone coming from Premiere Pro should feel right at home. But it’s since evolved into a full-featured video editing suite, combining sophisticated color correction tools such as HDR Grading, Color Warper and Magic Mask, along with tools for video editing, VFX, motion graphics and audio post-production. You may come across outdated posts and tutorials on the web that refer to DaVinci Resolve as a color grading tool, because that’s how it began life back in 2003.