That's tricky, and removing the effects is easier than reapplying them.
If the only thing on your timeline is these 100 clips, you can type
Ctrl+A and select all of the clips, then click on
Fix / Enhance, uncheck
VS,
CA and
CP & CLUTs, and you've got your clean clips back. If you have titles, audio clips, or anything else that doesn't have the ability to be stabilized or have a CLUT added, you'll need to manually select the video clips either one-by-one or in groups by dragging a selection rectangle around them because PD will only show the tools that are available for every selected clip.
Reapplying the changes is much more work.
The good news is that each clip will remember its
Color Adjustment and
Video Stabilizer settings when the effect is unchecked; the bad news is the
only way to re-enable the effect with the previous settings intact is to do that to each clip individually. If a group of clips is selected and the
CA or
VS settings are different on any of them, they will
all be set to the saved values of the clip that the scrubber is on.
If all 30 or 60 clips have the same settings anyway, this won't be an issue and you'll be able to reapply these changes as a group. In fact you could also do a single right-click and choose
Copy Keyframe Attributes and then a group select,
Paste Keyframe Attributes and take care of both settings at once.
The CLUTs are different. Once the CLUT is disabled, the setting is cleared and you have to (re)select a CLUT after the box has been checked. The good news here is that you can select all 100 clips, check the
CP & CLUTs box, click on the desired CLUT and you're done.
To be honest, it sounds like the easiest approach here would be to do your two proposed steps in the opposite order: essentially wait until you're done with all the other edits and then apply
VS,
CA, etc. at the end to finalize it. Is that a possibility?
If your goal is simply to have PD be able to work with the clips in real time - but all the clip adjustments you've made slows it down too much - you could use Range Produce to "lock in" the fixes so PD won't have to add each adjustment to every frame during the rest of your editing.
The ideal situation might even be to apply those changes to the original clips that you've cut the 100 clips from, so right from the start you'd be working with clips that are going to meet your visual standards. I don't know how much (extra) work that might be, but thinking about the problem in a different way can often lead to a more efficient solution.
YouTube/optodata
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