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-   -   Final Cut Clip Resolution Question (https://www.dvinfo.net/forum/final-cut-suite/474511-final-cut-clip-resolution-question.html)

Joel Summers March 10th, 2010 11:36 AM

Final Cut Clip Resolution Question
 
Hey all,

I’ve got a quick question. I imported video from a shoot I did last weekend into FCP 7. I shot in HDV, and converted to ProRes 422 upon importing. In FCP’s browser, I now have around 36 or so clips in ProRes.

If I take all of those clips and drop them in my sequence and export them to a quicktime movie keeping my ProRes settings, then take that file that I just made (36 clips now into one clip) and use that to edit my in and out points, will that one file have a lower resolution then the individual clips? (because I combined all of the clips into one)

If this is confusing, just let me know and I’ll try and re-word it.

Thanks!

Ryan Mitchell March 10th, 2010 04:49 PM

I think there is only a generation loss (i.e. quality loss) if you select "recompress frames" when you output it.

That said, I wouldn't do that I don't think - if you want to use a single long clip as a master for logging and making selects, think about just using the sequence you created with all the clips in it in a new sequence and create in/out points from that. I think you can open that sequence in the left hand-viewer (instead of the canvas window) and grab in/out points as usual and drop them into a new sequence. Even better, I think you can do a modified copy/paste where instead of pasting the master sequence into the new sequence, you can actually paste the underlying footage into the new sequence instead. Not sure if you can do this with in/out points or not. If not directly, try making your in/out points into the new sequence as usual, then copy/paste the entire new sequence and paste as original clips and see if that works.

I think my explanation is even more confusing than yours. Does that mean I win? :)

Simon Denny March 11th, 2010 04:47 AM

I shoot both SD & HD with my Sony EX1 and Sony F350 and both cameras make independent clips with every push of the record button.

I brings these clips in FCP and then render out to a master Quicktime everyday.
QT is just a wrapper for the selected codec in your seq settings. One thing to remember is when making a QT of the clips in the timeline is to change the audio out in seq settings to mono and also 0db. If you don't do this both audio tracks will be merged into one stereo track.

Cheers


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