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Activity Forums Apple Final Cut Pro Legacy DV sequence to ProRes sequence

  • DV sequence to ProRes sequence

    Posted by Harry Kafka on January 21, 2009 at 5:05 pm

    I’m finishing a doc with extensive color correction.
    It was shot in DV and my question is whether there is any quality difference in cutting and pasting the DV sequence into a ProRes sequence in order to get a better color correct as compared to using Media Manager to transcode the clips to ProRes first and then build a ProRes timeline.
    Thanks for any advice.

    Rafael Amador replied 17 years, 3 months ago 3 Members · 5 Replies
  • 5 Replies
  • Russell Lasson

    January 21, 2009 at 6:33 pm

    I would just duplicate the sequence, then change the compressor in sequence settings to ProRes HQ. You won’t gain any quality by transcoding the DV media to ProRes first.

    -Russ

    Russell Lasson
    Ridgeline Digital Cinema Mastering
    Universal Post
    Salt Lake City, UT

  • Harry Kafka

    January 21, 2009 at 7:33 pm

    Thanks Russell.

  • Rafael Amador

    January 22, 2009 at 8:52 am

    Hi harry,
    Don’t go that way. The only thing you get transcoding in FC from DV to ProRess is much bigger files without any benefit. You are writing 8b information with 10b.
    I suggest you a different way that have been giving me excellent results while working in DV:
    Edit and CC in a DV sequence. When you are finished:
    – Drop the Nattress Chroma Smooth/Sharpen. You must put it before any other filter.
    – Change you sequence codec to ProRess.
    – Set “Render all YUV material in High Precision YUV”.
    – Export.
    As I said, going from 8b to 10b without any Chroma filtering is just a waist of time and resources.
    If you want to go properly from DV to Proress, or this way, or though a good capture card.
    cheers,
    rafael

    http://www.nagavideo.com

  • Harry Kafka

    January 22, 2009 at 5:07 pm

    Thanks Rafael,
    One question about the Natress filter.
    How do you adjust parameters?
    Are the adjustments visible to the naked eye?

  • Rafael Amador

    January 23, 2009 at 6:02 pm

    Hi Harry,
    So far I’ve been working with the default setting. I think works perfect.
    Of course select the correct one (interlaced/progressive) according to the footage, and in MODE, check the appropriate option according to the footage too:
    – 411 for DV NTSC
    – 420 for DV PAL, HDV or XDCAM.
    Set it always as the first filter in the stack. I set it right before rendering (pain taking) because it cause always red-line when dropped on the clip.
    Cheers,
    rafael

    http://www.nagavideo.com

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