(2022-09-02, 04:09 PM)borisanddoris Wrote: Maybe this is a dumb question, but I want to take a 4K UHD disc I've ripped, and re-edit a movie to conform to a different cut that does not exist in HD or UHD. Yes, I'm going to be secretive because I want it to be a surprise and also, I'm not sure how well its going to go. Either way, I want to preserve the color information best I can, just need to re-cut the film. Is there a way to do this when importing the video stream into Adobe Premiere? If not, what's the best way to keep the video as faithful to the HDR/DV transfer as possible? Thanks!
Take my advice with a grain of salt, others might know better and sorry if I'm saying things you already know.
Well DV is out all together. Nothing will read DV at the moment. Not AP, Final Cut or even Resolve. Dolby has proprietary tools for DV and they aren't sharing. You can't convert DV to HDR10, not until someone figures out a hack.
AP should be able to do 2020 and 2100 HDR but it makes it very difficult on you. It has a list of requirements and problems that make it a real pita.
Some Requirements:
You need the latest and greatest copy of AP. AP has been doing HDR for like 8 years but has always kind of screwed it up until recently. The 2021/2022 copies seem to be better at HDR.
You need to set your timeline to HDR, you need to set you scopes to HDR and you need to sometimes interpret you footage as HDR when ingesting. Sometime AP can't identify the footage as HDR when it is.
You need to input footage in a HDR friendly editing format and container. AP will read H264 and H265 but it never edits those formats very well, especially in a MKV. Since UHDs are H265 AP kind of chokes on that especially in 4K. Having the format in HDR PR444, MXF, other Image sequences, etc might make it easier.
Some Problems:
The major problem that I am aware of is that AP is still built around 709. The monitor out, unless you using external cards, is stuck in 709. Doesn't matter if you have a HDR monitor, HDMI 2.1, etc. Any ingesting of HDR footage into AP is interpreted in AP as 709 via LUTs and the like so you can view it on a 709 monitor. You can put HDR footage in and get HDR footage out (also very difficult) but in AP that footage is 709. That is unless something has changed recently.
Second I think some effects don't work correctly when outputting into a HDR friendly format. Not sure which but that's what I've heard.
The sad part is Resolve does all the colorspace work, much, much better but man I hate editing using it. AP just needs a serious modernization by making it easier to deal with different format, colorspaces, etc .Hell even AE from the same company does better with colors.
What is the format of the footage you are inputting in AP?