2017

Table Of Contents
You cannot use a debayering setting higher than native resolution of the camera. Using a higher setting
prevents the media from being displayed, with an error message in the Preview panel (Cannot initiliaze codec).
Try lowering the debayering setting until the media debayers correctly.
QFHD (Quad-Full High Definition) is Sony's term for 3480x2160 UHD resolution, often times referred to as
4K HDTV, or 4K UHD. UHDTV (Ultra High Definition Television) is the 7680x4320 resolution, or 8K UHD.
Debayering options have been renamed to reflect what is used in other applications. The table below
highlights the changes.
ResolutionDebayering option
256x1350.25K
512x2700.5K
1024x5401K
1920x1080HD (1920x1080)
2048x10802K
3840x2160QFHD (3840)
4096x21604K
6144x32406K
7680x4320UHDTV (7680)
8192x43208K
Quality box Select one of two qualities for the decoding of SonyRAW footage. While debayering resolution
result in lower resolution clips, Quality affects the quality of the fully debayered pixels. Depending on your
system configuration, Standard provides better decoding performance at the cost of lower image quality
compared to High quality. The actual image degradation depends on the footage being decoded, but because
of the Bayer pattern, expect to see differences in the red and blue channels.
The Quality box is only available to the following Debayering settings: HD, 2K, and 4K.
Colour Settings
Colour Encoding box Select the colour space of SonyRAW media. Select Raw to disable this transformation
and work with the raw media. All other settings implicitly convert the 16-bit RAW media to 16-bit half-float.
If you select the Raw option, you can always apply a colour transform later from the General tab, using one
of the SonyRAW colour transforms available incamera/Sony.
The list displays the newer options on top (ACES), legacy ones at the bottom (starting with ACES(tungsten)).
These legacy options are included to provide compatibility with previously imported media. See
Choosing
a Working Color Space
(page 1308) and Applying Colour Management to Clips (page 1277).
176 | Chapter 6 Importing and Exporting Media