"You can now enable one of the three Super Scale options in the Video panel of Clip Attributes window for one or more clips." I'm assuming I can Super Scale it all at once as I read in the manual: (And if I did this would I still have to “bake in” the Super Scaled ProRes footage by creating a ProRes Optimized Media?)Ĥ) The film I'd like to Super Scale is 24 minutes long. Would the footage transcoded to ProRes remain interlaced? I'm suspecting so, as I see that “de-interlacing” in Resolve 15 requires the Studio version. Does Super Scaling work well on interlaced footage? On GOP footage? Or should I transcode the footage first, to something like ProRes and Super Scale that? And even here I'm a bit confused. Does what the manual says mean that this greater resolution will be visible in a Timeline left at 4:3 720 X 480? Or if one wants to see the impact of Super Scaling should one adjust the Timeline resolution accordingly (and later deliver at this resolution)?ģ) The footage I want to Super Scale is h.264 and 29.97i. A 3X Super Scaling would increase the resolution to 2160 X 1440. I'm wondering what is meant by “still within its native resolution”? In the case of a 4:3 SD clip a 2X Super Scaling would change its resolution from 720 X 480 to 1440 X 960. This is an illusion, but it's a convincing one in a pinch." ".makes it possible to re-size clips beyond their native resolution while maintaining the perceptible sharpness of a clip that's still within its native resolution. Also, what could the manual be suggesting when it says “or cache the clip in some other way”?Ģ) Should one adjust the Timeline resolution to reflect the new resolution of the Super Scaled clips? The manual says that Super Scaling: I'd suspect, too, that “baking in” would mean selecting a non-long GOP codec like ProRes. I understand this to be saying that if you don't go either of the two options suggested the clips in the Media Pool will become (premanently?) modified and the Timeline will have to do processor intensive work to play these “non-baked in” clips? To optimize these clips after Super Scaling, I suspect you'd go back to the same Clip Attributes menu that lead to the Super Scaling option and now select Optimize Media. ".the clip will have more pixels than it did before and will be more processor intensive to work with than before, unless you optimize the clip (which bakes in the Super Scaling effect into the Optimized Media) or cache the clip in some way." I think I'm pretty clear about the steps involved in Super Scaling but I still find myself with quite a few questions.ġ) Where to place the Super Scaled clips? The manual says:
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