and started testing stuff out again for a 4K edit. So I "finally" got a moment - or rather, I finally decided to be at least somewhat productive. ![]() So as long as you rip the disc in 10bit - set up the project settings to match the disc settings the colour spectrum will remain the same This footage below is taken from 4K but rendered in 1080p 10bit HDR - as you can see the colour is still intact.Please note Vimeo has heavily compressed the file. This is 4k footage rendered at 1080p 8bit SDR - you can see the colour is washed out Have you thought about starting your ROTS project with full 4K project settings - place your 4K file onto the time line - do your trims and crops and then render in MP4/HEVC 23.976FPS HDR10 I have done a few tests and the colour seem to be intact.footage doesn't look as washed out as SDRĪnother option is to do your crops as a separate project - render them in MP4/HEVC 23.976FPS HDR10 - once rendered add them to the 1080P project. (like, can an HDR file be regraded from that, or would it have to be converted to SDR first?)Īlso, yes, I'm working on a Rise of Skywalker edit! Haven't made a thread yet but I will once I get some more footing.Ĭlick to expand.I have been thinking about this on and off since you opened this thread. Maybe the initial step of converting HDR-to-SDR would still be necessary? Again, I really have no idea how HDR works. Now I'm thinking the solution may be less about HDR-to-SDR, but just regrading the file using one of these automated programs (or something like Dr Dre's Magical Color Matching Tool). *I'm not familiar with AviSynth at all, beyond the fact that it worked wonders for Possessed's A New Hope edit - IIRC he used a one-setting global correction for that. Comparing the footage from my Rise of Skywalker Blu-Ray, and the RipBot264'd UHD disc, it's not perfect, but it's way closer than I'd ever get trying to LUT it out myself. RipBot264 (or, the AviSynth* features within it, I guess) is not a 'perfect' solution.I previously was under the impression HDR was essentially just a LUT of sorts, but I think it may be more complex. Click the second icon (yellow folder + green arrow), and a pop-up should show Impressions" thanks for the input. Eventually, the clip-art should become static, and the "Source" information fields will be populated with.Open MakeMKV, the disc in the animated clip-art should be spinning, and the "Source" information should be loading.Most of you (should) probably already know how to do this, but I'll go through it anyways. Repeat steps 3 and 4, but flash using the BIN files found in the FlashIt folder. In the Info tab (on the right-hand side), under " LibreDrive Information", it should say " Status: Enabled". Use MakeMKV to verify your drive works.Go to the MakeMKV website, download the latest version for Windows, and run the setup file. ![]() to my understanding, converting to SDR is essential. However, if you're planning on integrating the 4K footage into a 1080p edit. Only necessary if you want to convert the footage from HDR to SDR, so for a full-4K edit, you may not need feel the need for it.Again: downloaded from the MakeMKV forums, but re-uploaded to GDrive for transparency + longevity.Downloaded from the MakeMKV forums, but re-uploaded to GDrive for transparency + longevity. ![]()
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