20+ Best Titles Templates for DaVinci Resolve – Speckyboy

Getting a viewer’s attention is a big challenge for video content creators. The key is to get them hooked from the first few frames. An effective title sequence can do that.

Titles that feature captivating movements are a must. You’ll also want strong visual effects and typography. Each is an ingredient to keeping viewers interested and engaged.

Building a high-quality title sequence from scratch is possible. However, it’s time-consuming and requires advanced video editing skills. It’s not always feasible in a fast-paced environment.

The good news is that you don’t have to do it all by yourself. A video title template includes everything you need to succeed. They provide you with animations, special effects, and a professional layout. Customize, add it to your presentation, and be on your way!

We’ve put together a collection of title templates created for DaVinci Resolve. Each has something unique to offer your projects. Check out them out and find the perfect match for your next presentation.

You might also like our collection of After Effects titles templates.

Here’s a stylish and modern collection of titles that are easy to customize. The animation is fluid and sure to draw viewers in. The package includes multiple layouts to help you create a cohesive look.

Animated Titles for DaVinci Resolve

This template offers a fun elastic text effect. Watch as words bounce in and out of view. Bold typography is used to maximize the impact of each sequence. Subtle shadows add a 3D aesthetic to the mix.

Elastic DaVinci Resolve Titles Template

You’ll find lightning-quick animation and bold text in this video title template. A glitchy background sequence is included to enhance the overall effect. Meanwhile, a black-and-white color scheme ties the presentation together.

Kinetic Typography Titles for DaVinci Resolve

Fans of geometric shapes and symmetry will want to check out this template. It features strong text styling and makes clever use of contrast. This versatile template would be at home in both corporate and entertainment projects.

Minimalist DaVinci Resolve Titles

Fast animations and 3D text outlines are the hallmarks of this presentation. An attention-getting color transition effect makes it all the more intriguing. The template includes 12 title sequences that are easy to customize.

Bold Titles for DaVinci Resolve

Here’s a simple yet compelling way to introduce your video. Bold headlines are combined with quick motion and slick transitions. It’s an excellent choice for projects that promise thrills and a fast-paced presentation.

Clean DaVinci Resolve Titles Template

Add a mid-century touch to your video projects with this vintage title template. It features retro looks – but don’t let that fool you. The effects here are professional and smooth. You’ll get the best of both worlds.

Vintage Titles for DaVinci Resolve

Are you looking to add a classic Hollywood aesthetic to your videos? This package includes multiple styles familiar to movie fans. It covers several film genres, including sci-fi, romance, and action adventure.

Cinematic DaVinci Resolve Titles

Introduce the stars of your video with these gorgeous lower-thirds titles. You’ll find modern typography and transition effects that will fit seamlessly with your project. Best of all, you can customize it to match your desired look.

Lower Thirds Titles for DaVinci Resolve

These overlay titles allow your presentation to shine through. Transparent text and backgrounds will add a unique touch to your intro. The look is professional and appropriate for a wide range of uses.

Text Overlay DaVinci Resolve Titles Template

Glitch effects never go out of style. They intersect modern and retro aesthetics. This template is a prime example of glitch effects in action. Beautiful typography transitions out with a colorful flair.

Glitch Titles for DaVinci Resolve

What’s the opposite of a high-tech look? This handwritten brush font is here to give your productions a homemade feel. Use it for videos for kids, crafts, or any project that could use a breath of fresh air.

Handwritten DaVinci Resolve Titles Font

This title template is perfect for those who want plenty of options. There are 75+ dynamic typography titles to choose from in this package. They’re bold and include pro-level animation effects.

Dynamic Titles for DaVinci Resolve

Travel back in time with these retro title templates for DaVinci Resolve. There are hints of the 1970s and ’80s here with groovy graphics and radical colors. Whether you’re looking for a vibe that screams Schoolhouse Rock or MTV, it’s here.

Retro DaVinci Resolve Titles Template

Here’s a template pack designed to bring quotes to life. The animation is lively, and the transitions are energetic. It’s an attractive way to inspire viewers and introduce the subject of your video.

Quote Titles for DaVinci Resolve

Morph effects are a natural fit for video titles. Here, you’ll find a sequence where each text title transforms into the next with eye-catching motion. It’s great fun and easy to customize.

Morph DaVinci Resolve Titles

Add a touch of class to a wedding or event video title with this template. The transition effects are intricate and match the subject matter beautifully. Perfect for times when you need a title that captures a moment.

Wedding Titles for DaVinci Resolve

Here’s a thoroughly modern approach to video title sequencing. This template is designed in the style of a text message conversation. Text bubbles are there to help you tell a story.

Text Message DaVinci Resolve Titles Template

Give your viewers a taste of the classic Bauhaus style with this video title template. The mix of fonts, colors, and shapes is an attention-getter. Use it anywhere where artistry will be appreciated.

Bauhaus Titles for DaVinci Resolve

Film credit layouts are perfect for displaying information in an easy-to-read format. This template features 25 layouts to help you share large amounts of text. You’ll also find multiple transition styles to complement your project.

Film Credit DaVinci Resolve Titles

Create a fun and familiar title with this typewriter template. You can use it with any font – meaning it’s possible to match your project’s aesthetic. Everything from retro computers to old-school paper effects is possible.

Typewriter Titles for DaVinci Resolve

Captivate Your Audience with a Top-Notch Title

Titles are an important piece for any video project. They help introduce viewers to your presentation and give them a sense of what’s to come.

The great thing about the title templates above is that they fit a wide range of subjects. There are options for just about any project imaginable. You may find yourself using them again and again.

So, don’t stress over your video’s title sequence. Pick a template above and make it your own! You may be surprised at how easy it is.


Related Topics

How mass migration remade postwar Europe

Migrants have become a flashpoint in global politics. But new research by an MIT political scientist, focused on West Germany and Poland after World War II, shows that in the long term, those countries developed stronger states, more prosperous economies, and more entrepreneurship after receiving a large influx of immigrants.

Those findings come from a close examination, at the local level over many decades, of the communities receiving migrants as millions of people relocated westward when Europe’s postwar borders were redrawn.

“I found that places experiencing large-scale displacement [immigration] wound up accumulating state capacity, versus places that did not,” says Volha Charnysh, the Ford Career Development Associate Professor in MIT’s Department of Political Science.

Charnysh’s new book, “Uprooted: How Post-WWII Population Transfers Remade Europe,” published by Cambridge University Press, challenges the notion that migrants have a negative impact on receiving communities.

The time frame of the analysis is important. Much discussion about refugees involves the short-term strains they place on institutions or the backlash they provoke in local communities. Charnysh’s research does reveal tensions in the postwar communities that received large numbers of refugees. But her work, distinctively, also quantifies long-run outcomes, producing a different overall picture.

As Charnysh writes in the book, “Counterintuitively, mass displacement ended up strengthening the state and improving economic performance in the long run.”

Extracting data from history

World War II wrought a colossal amount of death, destruction, and suffering, including the Holocaust, the genocide of about 6 million European Jews. The ensuing peace settlement among the Allied Powers led to large-scale population transfers. Poland saw its borders moved about 125 miles west; it was granted formerly German territory while ceding eastern territory to the Soviet Union. Its new region became 80 percent filled by new migrants, including Poles displaced from the east and voluntary migrants from other parts of the country and from abroad. West Germany received an influx of 12.5 million Germans displaced from Poland and other parts of Europe.

To study the impact of these population transfers, Charnysh used historical records to create four original quantitative datasets at the municipal and county level, while also examining archival documents, memoirs, and newspapers to better understand the texture of the time. The assignment of refugees to specific communities within Poland and West Germany amounted to a kind of historical natural experiment, allowing her to compare how the size and regional composition of the migrant population affected otherwise similar areas.

Additionally, studying forced displacement — as opposed to the movement of a self-selected group of immigrants — meant Charnysh could rigorously examine the scaled-up effects of mass migration.

“It has been an opportunity to study in a more robust way the consequences of displacement,” Charnysh says.

The Holocaust, followed by the redrawing of borders, expulsions, and mass relocations, appeared to increase the homogeneity of the populations within them: In 1931 Poland consisted of about one-third ethnic minorities, whereas after the war it became almost ethnically uniform. But one insight of Charnysh’s research is that shared ethnic or national identification does not guarantee social acceptance for migrants.

“Even if you just rearrange ethnically homogenous populations, new cleavages emerge,” Charnysh says. “People will not necessarily see others as being the same. Those who are displaced have suffered together, have a particular status in their new place, and realize their commonalities. For the native population, migrants’ arrival increased competition for jobs, housing, and state resources, so shared identities likewise emerged, and this ethnic homogeneity didn’t automatically translate into more harmonious relations.”

Yet, West Germany and Poland did assimilate these groups of immgrants into their countries. In both places, state capacity grew in the decades after the war, with the countries becoming better able to administer resources for their populations.

“The very problem, that migration and diversity can create conflict, can also create the demand for more state presence and, in cases where states are willing and able to step in, allow for the accumulation of greater state capacity over time,” Charnysh says.

State investment in migrant-receiving localities paid off. By the 1980s in West Germany, areas with greater postwar migration had higher levels of education, with more business enterprises being founded. That economic pattern emerged in Poland after it switched to a market economy in the 1990s.

Needed: Property rights and liberties

In “Uprooted,” Charnysh also discusses the conditions in which the example of West Germany and Poland may apply to other countries. For one thing, the phenomenon of migrants bolstering the economy is likeliest to occur where states offer what the scholars Daron Acemoglu and Simon Johnson of MIT and James Robinson of the University of Chicago have called “inclusive institutions,” such as property rights, additional liberties, and a commitment to the rule of law. Poland, while increasing its state capacity during the Cold War, did not realize the economic benefits of migration until the Cold War ended and it changed to a more democratic government.

Additionally, Charnysh observes, West Germany and Poland were granting citizenship to the migrants they received, making it easier for those migrants to assimilate and make demands on the state. “My complete account probably applies best to cases where migrants receive full citizenship rights,” she acknowledges.

“Uprooted” has earned praise from leading scholars. David Stasavage, dean for the social sciences and a professor of politics at New York University, has called the book a “pathbreaking study” that “upends what we thought we knew about the interaction between social cohesion and state capacity.” Charnysh’s research, he adds, “shows convincingly that areas with more diverse populations after the transfers saw greater improvements in state capacity and economic performance. This is a major addition to scholarship.”

Today there may be about 100 million displaced people around the world, including perhaps 14 million Ukrainians uprooted by war. Absorbing refugees may always be a matter of political contention. But as “Uprooted” shows, countries may realize benefits from it if they take a long-term perspective.

“When states treat refugees as temporary, they don’t provide opportunities for them to contribute and assimilate,” Charnysh says. “It’s not that I don’t think cultural differences matter to people, but it’s not as big a factor as state policies.” 

An inflatable gastric balloon could help people lose weight

Gastric balloons — silicone balloons filled with air or saline and placed in the stomach — can help people lose weight by making them feel too full to overeat. However, this effect eventually can wear off as the stomach becomes used to the sensation of fullness.

To overcome that limitation, MIT engineers have designed a new type of gastric balloon that can be inflated and deflated as needed. In an animal study, they showed that inflating the balloon before a meal caused the animals to reduce their food intake by 60 percent.

This type of intervention could offer an alternative for people who don’t want to undergo more invasive treatments such as gastric bypass surgery, or people who don’t respond well to weight-loss drugs, the researchers say.

“The basic concept is we can have this balloon that is dynamic, so it would be inflated right before a meal and then you wouldn’t feel hungry. Then it would be deflated in between meals,” says Giovanni Traverso, an associate professor of mechanical engineering at MIT, a gastroenterologist at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, and the senior author of the study.

Neil Zixun Jia, who received a PhD from MIT in 2023, is the lead author of the paper, which appears today in the journal Device.

An inflatable balloon

Gastric balloons filled with saline are currently approved for use in the United States. These balloons stimulate a sense of fullness in the stomach, and studies have shown that they work well, but the benefits are often temporary.

“Gastric balloons do work initially. Historically, what has been seen is that the balloon is associated with weight loss. But then in general, the weight gain resumes the same trajectory,” Traverso says. “What we reasoned was perhaps if we had a system that simulates that fullness in a transient way, meaning right before a meal, that could be a way of inducing weight loss.”

To achieve a longer-lasting effect in patients, the researchers set out to design a device that could expand and contract on demand. They created two prototypes: One is a traditional balloon that inflates and deflates, and the other is a mechanical device with four arms that expand outward, pushing out an elastic polymer shell that presses on the stomach wall.

In animal tests, the researchers found that the mechanical-arm device could effectively expand to fill the stomach, but they ended up deciding to pursue the balloon option instead.

“Our sense was that the balloon probably distributed the force better, and down the line, if you have balloon that is applying the pressure, that is probably a safer approach in the long run,” Traverso says.

The researchers’ new balloon is similar to a traditional gastric balloon, but it is inserted into the stomach through an incision in the abdominal wall. The balloon is connected to an external controller that can be attached to the skin and contains a pump that inflates and deflates the balloon when needed. Inserting this device would be similar to the procedure used to place a feeding tube into a patient’s stomach, which is commonly done for people who are unable to eat or drink.

“If people, for example, are unable to swallow, they receive food through a tube like this. We know that we can keep tubes in for years, so there is already precedent for other systems that can stay in the body for a very long time. That gives us some confidence in the longer-term compatibility of this system,” Traverso says.

Reduced food intake

In tests in animals, the researchers found that inflating the balloon before meals led to a 60 percent reduction in the amount of food consumed. These studies were done over the course of a month, but the researchers now plan to do longer-term studies to see if this reduction leads to weight loss.

“The deployment for traditional gastric balloons is usually six months, if not more, and only then you will see good amount of weight loss. We will have to evaluate our device in a similar or longer time span to prove it really works better,” Jia says.

If developed for use in humans, the new gastric balloon could offer an alternative to existing obesity treatments. Other treatments for obesity include gastric bypass surgery, “stomach stapling” (a surgical procedure in which the stomach capacity is reduced), and drugs including GLP-1 receptor agonists such as semaglutide.

The gastric balloon could be an option for patients who are not good candidates for surgery or don’t respond well to weight-loss drugs, Traverso says.

“For certain patients who are higher-risk, who cannot undergo surgery, or did not tolerate the medication or had some other contraindication, there are limited options,” he says. “Traditional gastric balloons are still being used, but they come with a caveat that eventually the weight loss can plateau, so this is a way of trying to address that fundamental limitation.”

The research was funded by MIT’s Department of Mechanical Engineering, the Karl van Tassel Career Development Professorship, the Whitaker Health Sciences Fund Fellowship, the T.S. Lin Fellowship, the MIT Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program, and the Boston University Yawkey Funded Internship Program. 

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