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From: "Benny Christensen" <bennychristensen@me.com>
To: "After Effects Mail List" <AE-List@media-motion.tv>
Sent: Tuesday, March 19, 2013 11:16:35 AM
Subject: Re: [AE] Windows to ProRes
Couldn't you just export the audio track and use QT Pro to copy and paste into the original movie to replace the audio?
Benny Christensen
Producers Playhouse
Oklahoma City
Facebook
"You can lead a horse to water, but a pencil must be lead" - Stan Laurel
I ran into the same thing - I had rendered out a 16bit prores 422-HQ file and wanted to change the audio so rather than re-render the whole thing I tried rendering out the file with the new audio back out to prores same settings - I brought it back in and it looked different (like you say slight color shift - could be gamma) also this is on a Mac so no PC/Mac issues here - I ended up rendering the file with the new audio - I wish there were an easier way (there probably is) to just change the audio portion with out re-rendering the whole thing.
tt
From: "Mr. Eric D. Kirk" <
kirkproductions@gmail.com>
To: "After Effects Mail List" <
AE-List@media-motion.tv>
Sent: Tuesday, March 19, 2013 8:00:09 AM
Subject: Re: [AE] Windows to ProRes
I guess it's neither here nor there at this point but I must not be making myself clear. I am checking a ProRes against a ProRes and there is a difference. Appreciate all the feedback though.
Eric
On Tue, Mar 19, 2013 at 10:51 AM, Benny Christensen
<bennychristensen@me.com> wrote:
It's because the gamma in the Quicktime codec is different than the Windows AVI or whatever.
No I haven't read about the other one.
Producers Playhouse
Oklahoma City