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  1. Like jagabo said - when used and configured properly , all will give the same results

    x.v. ( Rec1361) is backwards compatible with Rec709/601 systems . So if you don't have a full x.v. setup (player, TV), it will just look like regular Rec709, the other colors in the extended gamut range will not be visible or clipped . ffmpeg doesn't have a problem with this, it will treat it as regular Rec709 (but Rec601 by default when taking a screenshot or converting to RGB, unless the colormatrix filter is used)
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    Originally Posted by poisondeathray View Post
    Like jagabo said - when used and configured properly , all will give the same results

    x.v. ( Rec1361) is backwards compatible with Rec709/601 systems . So if you don't have a full x.v. setup (player, TV), it will just look like regular Rec709, the other colors in the extended gamut range will not be visible or clipped . ffmpeg doesn't have a problem with this, it will treat it as regular Rec709 (but Rec601 by default when taking a screenshot or converting to RGB, unless the colormatrix filter is used)

    I use two players, the MPCHC and Potplayer, both have bt.709 settings. Are there any possibility for this colormatrix filter in premiere pro or other editors and players?
    Last edited by Stears555; 4th Jul 2013 at 15:06.
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  3. Ut works fine with adobe , but premiere doesn't have color management, or something like a colormatrix filter.

    Colormatrix filter (the one we're referring to is ported from avisynth to ffmpeg) is for changing color in YUV to something as if it had used a certain matrix from a prior RGB=>YUV conversion. It's changing the values in YUV, not controlling the YUV<=>RGB conversion. If you've done everything correctly, you shouldn't need colormatrix in a video player (just adjust it to output 709)

    I typically don't use lossless codecs for "viewing" purposes in a media player, but would you have to configure them to use Rec709 for the YUV=>RGB conversion if they don't do it automatically, assuming you have it properly recorded in the first place
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