Operating system
Enable DirectX HDR support on Windows to get the best display for HDR content while working with Premiere Pro.
To check if your system configuration supports DirectX HDR:
If your hardware is unqualified, this option is not visible.
If your system configuration does not meet DirectX specifications, Premiere Pro reverts to OpenGL display graphics.
Operating system |
Windows 10, version 1709 or later |
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Display |
A display that supports the HDR10 standard. Windows works best with displays that are VESA DisplayHDR certified. |
GPU |
|
To enable DirectX HDR support, make sure Play HDR games and apps in Display Settings is switched on - putting your system into advanced color mode.
When advanced color is enabled, non-HDR content, including the system background, desktop and menus can appear dull and flat. Only actual HDR content appears normally. Adobe recommends that you only enable the HDR capability in the Display Settings when you are dealing with HDR content.
Supported views |
Unsupported views |
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Program Monitor |
Export Window |
Source Monitor |
Legacy Titler |
Transmit |
When sequence working space is set to Rec 709 (SDR), the preview files are clipped into SDR ranges. Importing HDR clips and directly playback preserves the HDR appearance. This is because Premiere Pro processes color in 32bit floating point and the overrange values goes into the HDR range.
However, all the HDR range data is lost as soon as you render them into preview files. Adobe recommends using an HDR sequence working color space for HDR production (Rec2100 HLG or Rec2100 PQ).
You can choose the sequence working color space in the Sequence settings.
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