Sean Parker
August 31st, 2009, 12:15 PM
Hi, all. I've found a lot of good information on the forum regarding the importance of converting footage to ProRes before editing, but I'm wondering which codec is the best choice for Mark II video.
Since the Mark II records at 38.6 Mbps (or so I hear), is there any benefit from using the high-end ProRes settings that go well over that amount? Here are the options I'm weighing.
Would ProRes 422 Proxy be a bad idea? It's a 45 Mbps codec. If no quality is lost, then fantastic, but if there's a better option I'm willing to go higher.
Any benefit from choosing ProRess 422 HQ (220 Mbps) over plain old ProRes 422 (147 Mbps)? One has a significantly higher bitrate, which I imagine is unnecessary, but would the color space (or other areas) benefit?
And lastly, I'd be a bit averse to trying this unless there were a definite advantage, but what about ProRes 4444 (a 330 Mbps format)? I don't want to deal with file sizes that big if I can avoid it, but I've heard that it's ideal for grading in Color. If there's a compelling reason to use that... I suppose I could get some more hard drives.
I'm pretty sure that most of the information I've heard about from these codecs is in regard to going from uncompressed 1080p HD video to ProRes, whereas since we're going from highly compressed h.264 to ProRes, so I wouldn't be too surprised if there wasn't a good reason to use the high-end options. If anyone has any experience using these, any advice would be tremendously appreciated!
Thanks,
-Sean
Since the Mark II records at 38.6 Mbps (or so I hear), is there any benefit from using the high-end ProRes settings that go well over that amount? Here are the options I'm weighing.
Would ProRes 422 Proxy be a bad idea? It's a 45 Mbps codec. If no quality is lost, then fantastic, but if there's a better option I'm willing to go higher.
Any benefit from choosing ProRess 422 HQ (220 Mbps) over plain old ProRes 422 (147 Mbps)? One has a significantly higher bitrate, which I imagine is unnecessary, but would the color space (or other areas) benefit?
And lastly, I'd be a bit averse to trying this unless there were a definite advantage, but what about ProRes 4444 (a 330 Mbps format)? I don't want to deal with file sizes that big if I can avoid it, but I've heard that it's ideal for grading in Color. If there's a compelling reason to use that... I suppose I could get some more hard drives.
I'm pretty sure that most of the information I've heard about from these codecs is in regard to going from uncompressed 1080p HD video to ProRes, whereas since we're going from highly compressed h.264 to ProRes, so I wouldn't be too surprised if there wasn't a good reason to use the high-end options. If anyone has any experience using these, any advice would be tremendously appreciated!
Thanks,
-Sean