For a film look, it's often necessary to turn the sharpening in-camera all the way down. The 1080p form the a6300 is really crappy (compared to the 1080p from the a6000) while the downscaled-from-a-6K-readout 4K is razor sharp. Then there's something seriously wrong, either with your eyes or with your lenses (or with your video editor?). Maybe my eyesight is not very good, or maybe my 10-18 lens is not very good, or maybe it is my monitor or the subjects, but so far I am actually having a hard time telling the difference between my 1080p clips and my 4K clips shot on my a6300. Yes, I would prefer to NOT have to sharpen in post, as you mentioned. So if downscaling, you might even need to blur to avoid moiré! That said, the 4K (1080p not so.) footage from the a6300 and a6500 is already very sharp, even when viewing 1:1. I'm sorry, language error! Indeed it's best to turn the proxies off (and thus the 4K source files on) when sharpening your footage. "For sharpening your footage it's best to turn them on for example."Īre you saying to turn on the original 4K files when sharpening? Or to turn on the proxy files when sharpening?Īh. UI is rather complicated but once I got the hang of it, it works well for me. That said, I really like Resolve because of the way it handles colours. I haven't used it yet as I don't have a 4K camera yet but I suppose it works well, without annoying colour issues. I know Davinci Resolve (Lite version) does. Not all editing software supports proxy files. So using proxies has benefits over using downscaled footage. If you, say, do a horizon correction, that correction will be done on the original 4K source footage. For sharpening your footage it's best to turn them on for example. For the export you can choose the resolution, 4K, 1080. The idea behind proxy files is that you use the proxies for editing but the final export is done with the (4K) source files. but I have heard that it might be good to edit in cineform codec instead of proxy files, but am not sure about that. Why not edit in 4K with 1080 (or 720p) proxy files?
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