![]() I love ProRes for the minimal degradation from the final EXR (although it can’t match the dynamic range of EXR) and use ProRes 444 whenever possible. Nuke support exporting to Apple ProRes with version 9.0 onwards.Here’s my list of tips when you need to export your work for final mastering or online: The GIF is a self-explanatory again and I boost the gamma for the comparison to showcase the artifact produced in H.264 compression. I didn’t include the final render EXR file but the ProRes screenshot should serve as the benchmark versus the H.264 screenshots.Ĭompression can be a pain in the butt when the many details that you had worked on lost in translation from the original final render (preferably saved in EXR). : I realise I didn’t attached the screenshots zip file for this article.
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