Normally I wouldn't go near quicktime but for reasons I can't control I'd like to read Quicktime Uncompressed 10-bit YUV directly in Nuke. This will introduce a distinct chroma shift so it's not possible. What's your experience with this? Any solutions? I Believe I've read numerous threads on this matter but didn't find anything specific on 10bit uncompressed. I know it's complicated and that it probably has to do with Nuke's "home-brew" of the quicktime reader. Normally I wouldn't consider anything but file sequences in Nuke, or in the rest in my workflow for that matter. But this time I have like a gazillion quicktime files that needs to be treated and I'd prefer not to have to convert them elsewhere previous to bringing them to Nuke. What's your experience with this? Is it even possible to keep a controlled workflow with any type of uncompressed Quicktime format? I've had a look at ProRes before and that was problematic too with chroma shifts introduced. I hate hate hate hate Quicktime. From the bottom of my heart. Hate it. Sorry.... now I feel better.
Cheers, J.
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