2020-05-31, 06:51 PM
(2020-05-31, 06:40 PM)TomArrow Wrote: Something else to keep in mind is that the extra detail may just be more of the 2K detail being preserved due to the higher bitrate.
I did wonder that. The 4K render doesn't look proper 4K, but it does look sharper. That goes for both dirt and actual picture detail.
(2020-05-31, 06:40 PM)TomArrow Wrote: The Grindhouse encode you did smoothes out most of the grain etc. and I suspect it's because you used the internal H264 encoder of Resolve, which is awful (all integrated H264 encoders are pretty much, including Adobe too). I'd recommend doing your 2K vs 4K comparison in a format like DNxHD to account for that variable, or to do proper x264 encodes of DNxHD renders with good settings, otherwise the comparison isn't necessarily conclusive.
Even before encoding the raw frames don't look that grainy, which was a surprise to me. I've heard a lot of bad things about Resolve's x264 encoder. The DNG files have been captured with a Blackmagic camera using a Blackmagic colour space, and require using Resolve at some point to get the correct colours. But like I said my plan was to export to TIFF files, so should be able to bypass Resolve for the final x264 encode.
I've not used DNxHD before, I'll have a read into it and try rendering the scene using it.
Program material is recorded on the other side of this disc...