Activity › Forums › Apple Final Cut Pro Legacy › ProRes 422 setting and rendering
-
ProRes 422 setting and rendering
Jeremy Garchow replied 15 years, 11 months ago 2 Members · 20 Replies
-
Michael Williams
June 7, 2010 at 9:40 pmwe shot with the Panasonic 3000 in the 1080 30p setting but perhaps it goes to P2 interlaced or perhaps it gets converted to interlaced on the ingest/transcode to prores 422?
all beyond my expertise…I’m just trying to edit without rendering.
thanks
Michael V. Williams
producer/editor
http://www.vernonvision.com -
Jeremy Garchow
June 7, 2010 at 9:42 pm[Michael Williams] ” setting but perhaps it goes to P2 interlaced or perhaps it gets converted to interlaced on the ingest/transcode to prores 422? “
No. What Dave said is just confusing you (sorry Dave).
For all intents and purposes, you shot 30p and you can edit 30p. We just have to find where your settings aren’t matching. Please post a screen cap of your clip settings and your sequence settings.
Jeremy
-
Michael Williams
June 7, 2010 at 9:44 pmJeremy-
I don’t know of a column in the browser that shows whether a clip is progressive or interlaced. So, I’m not sure how to get an image of that to post. If you know, please post and I will do it.
thanks
Michael V. Williams
producer/editor
http://www.vernonvision.com -
Jeremy Garchow
June 7, 2010 at 9:48 pmRight click on one of the clips in your browser and choose Item Properties > Format. Then take a screen grab of that. Then open your sequence, hit command-zero to bring up the settings, and take a screen cap of that.
Jeremy
-
Jeremy Garchow
June 8, 2010 at 1:20 pmYep, that all looks correct. Thanks.
First, the easy stuff.
Quit FCP, trash prefs and delete your thumbnail and waveform cache.
-
Michael Williams
June 8, 2010 at 5:28 pmJeremy-
not sure which part of that did the trick, but it seems to be working properly now.
thanks,
mike
Michael V. Williams
producer/editor
http://www.vernonvision.com
Reply to this Discussion! Login or Sign Up

