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codec issuePosted by nlittrell
i'm trying to render out a sequence to prep for export. footage shot on hdv 1080i 60p. my sequence settings are 1440 x 108060i pro rez, compressor set at pro rez 422; under sequence/settings, the compressor is set to pro rez.
when i rendered last night after a work session, i had no problems. the difference today is that i added some still images, which are jpegs--but i don't see why those would be a problem. i also have several mov files i captured via i show u--but they were a part of the sequence yesterday when i had no problems. this seems to be where the rendering gets hung up. the error message i get is that i don't have the right compression card for that codec. but when i check the properties on these mov clips they're at the same frame rate as the rest of my footage and compressed with pro rez, just like i set it when i captured. i've deleted the clips and reinserted them back into the sequence--not working. fcp won't render beyond these mov files. deadline first thing tomorrow a.m.--anyone know how to fix this? thanks for any help you can provide. nicolle
#14 Codec not Found
Shane's Stock Answer #14: Codec not Found If you get a CODEC NOT FOUND missing hardware check ALL your images in Photoshop and make sure there are in a RGB color space NOT CYMK, LAB, OR GREYSCALE www.shanerosseditor.com Listen to THE EDIT BAY Podcast on iTunes [itunes.apple.com]
When you "import" into FCP, FCP just makes clips that point to the media. If you want the media to work right, copy it to the Scratch drive (and organize it so everything is together and WELL labelled), and then import.
You use Photoshop or Preview to check what the picture format is. Are any of the stills over 4000 pixels on any side? FCP has a 4K limit. www.shanerosseditor.com Listen to THE EDIT BAY Podcast on iTunes [itunes.apple.com]
It's probably a byte order issue that FCP doesn't like. Save all your pictures as tiff with preview and reconnect them. Then get a good book from the lafcpug store.
www.strypesinpost.com
Just to recap. As mentioned make sure images are RGB and save either as a jpeg or tiff if you need transparency in a cut out image. For dimensions of images for the 4000 limit the other person is mentioning is refering to the pixel dimensions not size by inches. Also make sure the dpi is no higher then 72.
Now for exporting your video you don't need to export with the prores codec unless you are sending your video to another editor to be added to their timeline. Just use quicktime conversion with h.264.
>Also make sure the dpi is no higher then 72
dpi or ppi makes no difference in the video world, as we only care about pixels, and not real world inches. >or tiff if you need transparency It depends on your source. If your source is a lossless codec or a .svg file, always use tiff, tga or png. >given that the video footage is hd, would it help at all to de-interlace? It depends on whether you are going out to web or broadcast. Deinterlace for web. >Now for exporting your video you don't need to export with the prores codec unless you are >sending your video to another editor to be added to their timeline. You can export a high quality "digital master" for further encoding to your delivery formats (eg. DVD/H.264, etc.) The tools outside of FCP may provide better control over certain parameters such as resizing and deinterlacing. >Just use quicktime conversion with h.264 Quicktime conversion is a legacy (but convenient) option. Quicktime conversion adds a pass of compression to your export, also Compressor's scaler and de-interlace tools are far better than Quicktime. Also, H.264 is only a delivery format, so you should not use it for further compression. www.strypesinpost.com
>The 4K limit isn't true anymore. We tested this recently and had no trouble with images with over 10k pixel widths.
Funny, I'm still getting the same GENERAL ERROR when I render stills over 4K. When I reduce them to 3800, problem vanishes. www.shanerosseditor.com Listen to THE EDIT BAY Podcast on iTunes [itunes.apple.com]
The 10K image imports fine on my laptop, but not so fine on some machines. That said, you will still take quite a while to render the image in FCP, so scale it down...
www.strypesinpost.com
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