Activity › Forums › Apple Final Cut Pro › Better to conform 60FPS to 24fps?
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Better to conform 60FPS to 24fps?
Joe Shapiro replied 11 years, 10 months ago 9 Members · 37 Replies
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Oliver Peters
February 8, 2013 at 12:17 pmTry converting to ProRes and see if that changes things. It might be a problem because of the LongGOP structure of the H264 file.
Oliver
Oliver Peters Post Production Services, LLC
Orlando, FL
http://www.oliverpeters.com -
Beachwood Productions
February 8, 2013 at 3:08 pmI’ll give it a try. Thanks for the help Oliver. 🙂
Peter Wilcox
Beachwood Productions -
Beachwood Productions
February 10, 2013 at 11:45 pmBetter yet I found that my new GH3 records native slow motion. 🙂
Peter Wilcox
Beachwood Productions -
Matias Canelson
July 17, 2013 at 1:58 amWell, I hit a wall today… 59,94fps media imported and conformed inside a 23,98fps timeline doesn´t show up in DaVinci Resolve (9.1.5 and FCP 10.0.8).
We don´t use Resolve in our company, we use Scratch, but I was running some test today and I found this and looks like it´s a common problem. Which I wouldn´t have if I conformed the files using CinemaTools before editing. Finally I exported an Apple ProRes 422 (HQ) file to Scratch to grade (media was shot with a 5D MarkIII).
Does any of you know a good (free) alternative to just change the header of the quicktime file?
PS:After a little research I found this blog with a complete (and very technical) guide to roundtrip from FCPx to DaVinci
Part 1: https://wolfcrow.com/blog/how-to-round-trip-from-final-cut-pro-x-to-davinci-resolve-part-one-fcp-x-to-resolve/
Part 2: https://wolfcrow.com/blog/how-to-round-trip-from-final-cut-pro-x-to-davinci-resolve-part-two-resolve-to-fcp-x/
Part 3: https://wolfcrow.com/blog/how-to-round-trip-from-final-cut-pro-x-to-davinci-resolve-part-three-dealing-with-changes/
Part 4: https://wolfcrow.com/blog/how-to-round-trip-from-final-cut-pro-x-to-davinci-resolve-part-four-round-tripping/—
MatiasCanelson
http://www.canelson.com.ar -
Jeremy Garchow
July 17, 2013 at 2:18 am•I don’t know of any free ones. QTEdit will do this, but its not free.
•You could bake the clips in before Resolve.
•You could put the original clips in a different time base project and grade and conform those separate, just leave a gap clip for timing in the master. When you get the returns, simply add back the clips and adjust their timing back to where they were in the offline.
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Joe Shapiro
July 15, 2014 at 11:56 pmJust found a free conform tool:
https://arvidtp.net/sw/lossless_frame_rate_converter.php
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Joe Shapiro
Director / Producer / Editor
206-420-6411imdb.com/name/nm1497731/
twitter.com/JoeSh
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