- Posts: 18
- Joined: Mon Apr 24, 2017 9:39 pm
I have posed this question in the past, without much response. Hoping with the new release some new light can be shed on this question.
What nodes, and or operations concatenate and what do not.
Specifically in regards to color pipeline and transformations
For instance.
What color operations are concatenated?
For example a serial node with primaries feeding into another serial node with primaries appears to concatenate the math to a single operation.
Applying a 3DLUT to a serial does not concatenate.
What is the order of operation of transforms, and when do they or do not concatenate.
For example, an fit to timeline is applied on the edit page, then a node transform is applied in the the color page. It appears that this process is NOT concatenated and as such a loss of data is present.
With the addition of Fusion, what is the order of transform operation and where does the resample happen or concatenation happen.
Without any documentation it can be difficult to tell where these processes happen and as such where we are potentially introducing a loss of data.
thanks
Eric
What nodes, and or operations concatenate and what do not.
Specifically in regards to color pipeline and transformations
For instance.
What color operations are concatenated?
For example a serial node with primaries feeding into another serial node with primaries appears to concatenate the math to a single operation.
Applying a 3DLUT to a serial does not concatenate.
What is the order of operation of transforms, and when do they or do not concatenate.
For example, an fit to timeline is applied on the edit page, then a node transform is applied in the the color page. It appears that this process is NOT concatenated and as such a loss of data is present.
With the addition of Fusion, what is the order of transform operation and where does the resample happen or concatenation happen.
Without any documentation it can be difficult to tell where these processes happen and as such where we are potentially introducing a loss of data.
thanks
Eric