![]() HDR is still the Wild Wild West, very few devices are fully capable of it, most of them juke the data values around so viewing on one device to the next may be dramatically different. And the theatrical release format has a brightest nit value well below the SDR 100 nits standard! So the discussion boards for pro colorists dealing with HDR, are about learning about how to setup for it, for when they finally get some work in HDR.Įverything they deliver is still SDR, standard Rec.709, except for the long-form theatrical stuff which is P3-DCI typically. And have never ever delivered an HDR show. The vast majority of pro colorists aren't even setup to work in HDR. the people delivering for current broadcast, streaming, and movies. As I noted, I work daily with a ton of pro colorists. So you're not actually using an HDR workflow. I think I'll just hold off until more bug fixes are released and try again. It now works fine and I've managed to get this sorted but like I said, it's a work around and not really solving the problem of whatever was going on in PP 2022. Also I had to add a gamma conversion LUT on export to correct contrast issues from the previous version of PP. I had to change the preference settings and tick Display Colour Management. My file then needed to be back dated so I could open in an older version (Using Keka). I've managed to sort a work around for this now and have managed to correctly export the file. I was just trying anything/any settings really to get the film to come out the same as the preview. ![]() To be honest I'm not hugely savvy on all the different capabilties and technical aspects behind PP but I shoot my weddings in a flat profile and then add my own LUTS to grade the footage to give it more dynamic range. Opened on my iMac (2019) and my brand new Macbook Pro (2021) to see if that changed anything.Īny help with this would be much appreciated, I need to deliver this to a client asap. ![]() Created a new sequence and copied across the timeline to see whether it was the sequence that was corrupted. Tried opening the file in an old version of Premiere but says it cannot be opened on older versions Exporting in different file formats (.mov. I've attached a photo of what I can see within Premiere Pro and what it looks like after export. It still opens the file but the quality of the video is awful and it has a horrible red/pink hue to a lot of the video. The preview of the render when exporting shows a clean and correct image but once the file has competely exported I try to open it and it says "The file contains some media that isn't compatible with QuickTime Player". I've edited/colour graded the piece within Premiere and exported using the same settings that I've always used. I've recently completed a wedding edit and it's now ready to deliver to my client. ![]()
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