Support for the Sony VENICE camera is based on the supported version of its firmware. At the moment, firmware version 6 is supported.
Firmware version 2.0 focused on new X-OCN resolutions:
Features in firmware version 3.0:
High-Frame Rate support is the main feature of firmware version 4.0:
All of the High Frame Rates (except 6K 50/60p) support X-OCN recording, including X-OCN XT.
High Frame Rates (HFR) up to 60 fps support XAVC 4K/QFHD and ProRes recording.
The Compression information for Sony RAW & X-OCN media files is now available in MediaHub Preview
Metadata.
The Sony VENICE 2, released in February 2022, is also supported. For more information on this camera, see Sony documentation. It introduces the following supported formats.
Imager mode | Resolution | Project Frame Rate |
---|---|---|
5.8K 17:9 | 5792 x 3056 | 23, 24, 25, 29, 50, 59 |
5.4K 16:9 | 5434 x 3056 | 23, 24, 25, 29, 47, 50, 59 |
5.8K 6:5 | 5792 x 4854 | 23, 24, 25, 29, 47 |
7.6K 16:9 | 7680 x 4320 | 23, 24, 25, 29, 50, 59 |
8.2K 17:9 | 8192 x 4320 | 23, 24, 25, 29, 47, 50, 59 |
8.6K 3:2 | 8640 x 5760 | 23, 24, 25, 29 |
The following Sony Venice colour transforms are for ACES workflows (AP0/AP1):
They reflect the differences in X-OCN media between files generated by the CineAlta PMW-F5/F55 and the Venice/Venice 2 cameras. They match the Input Device Transforms provided by Sony Electronics to AMPAS. See this GitHub repo for more details.
When importing X-OCN media files generated by Sony Venice cameras, using the Tag From File option uses the Venice colour space (Slog3 / SGamut3.Cine-Venice).
Select an option to determine how the tape name is set when importing clips.
Select: | To: |
---|---|
Enter Tape Name | Activate the Tape Name field where you enter the tape name. When selecting multiple files for import, this tape name is used for all imported files. |
Tape Name from File Name | Use the name of the imported file as the tape name. |
Tape Name from Directory | Determine the tape name from the detected directory structure. Use the Level field below to configure the relative path to the directory from which the tape name can be determined. |
Tape Name from Header | Read the tape name from the header of the imported file. |
Set from which directory the tape name is taken, relative to the location of the clip in the directory structure.
Although available for all types of files, the Level field is intended for directory structures output by film scanners. A typical image file directory structure looks like this: ./<tape>/<resolution>/clip.######
. In this case, selecting Levels Up 2 in the Level field identifies the directory that corresponds to the tape name (./<tape>
). Enabled if Tape Name is set to Tape From Directory.
Enter the name to use as tape name when importing the clip. Enabled if Tape Name is set to Enter Tape Name.
Flip (vertical) or flop (horizontal) the media when importing the clip. Camera uses the orientation defined on the camera during the shoot. Disable Flip to use the true orientation of the image, as it was shot.
Select how the clip is named when the file is imported.
Select: | To: |
---|---|
Enter Clip Name | Activate the Clip Name field so that you can manually enter the clip name. When selecting multiple files for import, this name is used for all imported files. |
Clip Name from File Name | Use the name of the imported file as the clip name. |
Select the resolution at which the media is imported. Higher resolutions require more processing and impact real-time playback. Other resolutions offer better performance at the cost of lower image resolution.
Not every debayering work for every camera. To maximize compatibility, use the relative settings: Full, Half, Quarter, Eighth, Sixteenth.
If you cannot debayer a media file, you will see the following error message in the Preview panel: Error: output_resolution not available for bitstream_typ). In that case, use one of the numerical values such as HD, 2K or 8K UHD until the media debayers correctly.
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 Debayering settings 4K and below.
Use GPU ensures the debayering happens on the GPU. This is the option to use for best performance. Use CPU if the GPU decoding causes issues such as image corruption.
GPU decoding is only available on CentOS.
Select how exposure is set. Choose Exposure From File to use the camera settings.
Select the ISO rating that is applied to the imported clips. Supported values: 160 to 3200. Enabled when Exposure is Set ISO.
Select the white balance value to use. White Balance From File uses the camera settings burned in the clip.
Set the perceptual colour temperature of the imported file. In Kelvin. Enabled if White Balance is set to Set Temperature.
Set the green/magenta tint balance: positive value for green tint, negative value for magenta tint. Enabled if White Balance is set to Set Temperature.