ProRes422(HQ) vs H.264...

My original project was edited using the ProRes 422(HQ) format in the timeline.

I tried exporting a small clip (54 sec) using both ProRes and H.264 formats. I noticed that the ProRes clip was 3X larger than the H.264 and had slighter better color and contrast.

I tried exporting the whole movie (1 hr 17min) in both formats, the H.264 ended up being 13.08 GB and the ProRes version is 11.63 GB. I am wondering why the total sizes are nearly identical now and curious which one to use for my final SD DVD and Blue Ray copies? I would have thought the ProRes would have ended up being less compressed (bigger file and more GB) but it did not turn out that way. The color is slightly richer with the ProRes so I might might to go with that one even though it is more compressed!!

Regards,

Rory

iMac Dual Core 2.4GHZ, Mac OS X (10.5.5), 4GB RAM (2) 2000GB GRAID2 Ext. Drives (1) 500GB Ext. Drive, Final Cut Studio 2

Posted on Dec 26, 2009 6:10 PM

Reply
18 replies

Dec 27, 2009 7:24 AM in response to Tom Wolsky

I am going to have to disagree with you here. ProRes is a compressed format, so using a higher bit rate is going result in better looking video.

The only reason it does not help in this particular case is because the original format is HDV which is already an extremely compressed format; much more than ProRes or ProRes HQ.

Unless you are doing a ton of post effects; you would probably be better off just editing in HDV, although working with ProRes is faster.

I have no idea how you are getting a ProRes export to be smaller than H.264 unless you have some settings really bonkers.

-mark

Dec 27, 2009 8:53 AM in response to Tom Wolsky

Tom, although I agree that h.264 is not an ideal intermediate export format, at full quality when you need to upload and download elements it does maintain an amazing amount of quality. This is the voice of experience speaking. Last year I had to deliver a 720 stereoscopic program. I was onsite in New Orleans and my animator was in NYC. He was able to upload clips as h264 and I was able to download them, convert them to dvcproHD, edit and output as mpeg2 program streams that looked great. This was the only workflow that allowed us to deliver. If there's another format that will get your file sizes down this much with so little loss, please let me know.

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ProRes422(HQ) vs H.264...

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