![]() ![]() The files however remain the same, so FCPX, QT, VLC, DAV GUI etc. The behavior is actually understandable, but since resolve is not doing that same operation in the GUI you've got dissimilar renderings. The reason QT does this is that it reads from the file header that it is in the R709 color space, then checks your system color profile (probably sRGB) and performs a Correction to display what QT thinks is proper. Nevertheless, you're not the first one having those issues, the pictures you've shown clearly indicate that QT is crushing stuff, so as I mentioned before, I would blame QT. Hum, I'm surprised you got the same problem with ProRes 4444, this one should behave differently. Attachments TESTS copy.jpg (967.39 KiB) Viewed 3761 times Here is the same clip which exported from Resolve and how it looks compared to the others.Īs you can see VLC/Resolve versions are more saturated and with milky blacks compared to FCPX/Quicktime version. Thank you for the posts which explain the "quicktime gamma shift bug" but Im not sure if it is that in my situation because as I said earlier the fcpx timeline and quicktime player match perfectly. The problem is that I get different colours while Im exporting from Resolve which only the VLC player can show correct this time. So mainly when Im using FPCX + quicktime everything is ok. Also the same file if I drop it in the FCPX timeline, it will have the same colours just when I open it with Quicktime. The same file which has been exported from Resolve, has different colours when I will open it with Quicktime player and the same colours when I will open it this time with VLC. I have tried Prores HQ, LT, 4444, h264 etc.The issue is not hiding behind a codec this time I think. ![]() Second which one of these 2 is the right one to trust for my colour grading? So final I have 2 questions to help me understand a few things.įirst is there any gamma difference between fcpx/quicktime and resolve/vlc to explain the difference between these 2? So the next step was to think why I have this difference between quicktime player and VLC.The next step was to take that exported clip and put it into fcpx timeline and compare it with quicktime player.OMG this time fcpx and quicktime was an absolute match! just like with Resolve and VLC. So first of all I was having issues when I was exporting a clip from Resolve regarding to brightness.That translates that every clip after export was much brighter than what I was seeing on Resolve.After a research I found that I had to declick the choice "Use Mac display colour profile for viewers" from colour management tab.After that I could see same exposure but slight different colours when I was watching my exported clip to quicktime player.So I tried VLC for a change and I figured out that was exact the same as what I was seeing at Resolve.Phew that made me feel much better. ![]() Monitor: Dell U2413 calibrated with X-rite i1Display Pro and i1Profiler at SRGB and 120cd/m Luminance. I have an issue regarding export from FCPX and DaVinci Resolve and how these files behave with players. ![]()
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