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dpx

DPX, short for Digital Picture Exchange, is a digital raster image file format developed for the film and video post-production industry. Originating with Kodak’s Cineon system in the 1990s, it has since become a widely used interchange and archival format for individual frames in digital intermediates and scanned film workflows. DPX is designed to preserve high image quality and metadata across stages of production.

A DPX file represents a single frame and can store image data in various bit depths and

Metadata is a key feature of DPX. The headers include information about image dimensions, aspect ratio, bit

DPX remains prevalent in professional pipelines for film scanning, visual effects, and archival storage due to

color
formats.
Common
configurations
include
RGB
data
with
10-,
12-,
or
16-bit
per
channel,
and
data
can
be
stored
in
either
interleaved
or
planar
layouts.
The
format
supports
both
linear
and
log-like
color
representations,
depending
on
the
workflow,
and
can
accommodate
different
endianness
and
pixel
formats.
A
DPX
file
is
organized
into
a
file
header,
an
image
header,
and
the
image
data,
with
optional
user
data
and
time-code
metadata
embedded
in
the
header
sections.
depth,
color
space,
and
data
type,
as
well
as
production
details
such
as
date,
source,
frame
rate,
and
telecine
or
film-origin
flags.
This
rich
metadata
supports
tracking
and
provenance
throughout
post-production.
its
lossless
or
near-lossless
image
fidelity
and
robust
metadata.
It
is
supported
by
many
industry
software
tools,
though
newer
formats
like
OpenEXR
are
also
used
for
HDR
workflows.