This might help explain the “dummy session” setup mentioned in previous post. This session does not use the catalog of Capture One
It was me that used the term dummy session earlier. I also call it an empty session. You are probably aware of this, but to expand my dummy folder description.
C1 has four ways of working with files.
A C1 managed catalogue, where the raw files are physically saved inside a container file, where previews, indexes, edits etc are also stored. This was the default for Apple Aperture, when it existed.
A C1 referenced catalogue (the default), where the raw files are left in the system folders where PM or C1 imported them to, and only the previews, indexes edits etc are stored inside a C1 catalogue file. The same approach as Lightroom uses.
A C1 session where the raw files associated with a Session are imported into a system folder designated as a "capture" Folder inside a top level C1 session folder. There are other folders/files created by C1 inside this top level session folder which are used for storing previews, edit information program customisation etc.
The concept behind a Session is that you can create a single session folder that contains subfolders for all the files (raw files and output files) along with all the previews, edits etc that associated with a single project. This makes the entire project self contained for moving between computers and archiving.
When you create a session, and import files into that session, you physically move the files into the session capture folder. This is the standard way of using sessions.
However, as I assume it shows in the video, there is a fourth way, that is rarely mentioned. In a C1 session you can also browse the system folders where raw files are stored, from inside C1, and simply open the files inside a session without importing them into the Session Capture folder.
You still need to create a Session file, but as nothing is imported into the session folders, so the session folders remain empty, hence the dummy or empty session description.
Using a session in this way means that C1 creates a "CaptureOne" folder inside every folder where a raw file has been edited by C1. This folder stores the C1 created previews along with the edit information.
It's a useful way of using C1, but you do of course lose the "self contained" advantage of Sessions.