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Activity Forums Apple Final Cut Pro Legacy PHOTO_JPEG via compressor workflow, from PRO RES HDV

  • PHOTO_JPEG via compressor workflow, from PRO RES HDV

    Posted by Zack Hill on March 25, 2008 at 11:53 pm

    A client has asked me to send him my HDV clips from my Sony V1U as photo Jpeg.
    I am capturing the media with PRO RES at 24PA, and exporting from FCP via compressor with a custom setting for photo Jpeg that I made for 24PA footage.

    The file size is quadrupling! Am I doing something wrong?
    What are the advantages of Photo Jpeg, and why would he want that format versus the format I captured the footage with? (I asked him this, and he stated that his clients want photo jpeg)

    Thanks for your help in advance!
    Jesus
    http://www.vayacongringos.com
    G5 FCP 6.0.2

    Tom Brooks replied 18 years, 1 month ago 3 Members · 4 Replies
  • 4 Replies
  • Jeremy Garchow

    March 26, 2008 at 1:20 am

    How’d you set up the PhotoJPEG? I believe, PhotoJPEG @ 75% is 4:2:2, at 100% it’s 4:4:4. That could account for the bloated file size with no gain in quality.

  • Zack Hill

    March 26, 2008 at 5:53 pm

    aha! that would make sense for the huge file sizes.
    I can’t seem to change the Jpeg settings in compressor, even if I make it custom. I can change the video quality, but not the actual compression setting like you can in Photoshop.
    Can you make a custom setting for Photo jpeg at 75?
    While we are on the subject, what is this codec good for?
    Thanks Jeremy,
    zack

  • Jeremy Garchow

    March 26, 2008 at 7:07 pm

    Yes. In the Encoder tab click the settings button for video. Choose PhotoJPEG for compression then slide the quality to High (which equals 75%).

    Jeremy

    Sorry, forgot to add the PhotoJPEG is a pretty decent codec with relatively small file sizes and nice quality. Also, it scales to 4:4:4 which is handy if you are in to that sort of thing. Apple never implemented it to its rt engine. Don’t know why.

  • Tom Brooks

    March 27, 2008 at 12:03 pm

    The other advantage of the codec is that it’s cross-platform and comes standard with Quicktime, so it’s a decent choice when you are passing files from one system to another and you don’t want to deal with supplying the codec on the other end.

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