A clean handoff is not luck, it is a checklist. Here is what to verify before a .nk goes to finals, a client, or the next artist - and how Nuke Studio Hub runs the whole thing in one pass.
The checklist
- Write paths. Every Write points at the delivery folder, not a scratch or local drive.
- Versions. Version tokens are present and consistent across all Write nodes.
- Render names. Output names follow the studio convention and match what the client expects.
- Read media. No missing plates, no broken absolute paths, no local-only references.
- Frame ranges. Read ranges match the media and the script.
- Gizmos and ToolSets. No unknown, missing or deprecated nodes that will fail on another machine.
- Folder structure. comp, renders, elements, scripts, in and out folders are in order.
- Report. An audit report is attached so the recipient can see the comp is clean.
Run it automatically
Doing this by hand across a heavy comp is slow and easy to skip under deadline. Nuke Studio Hub checks every item on the list by parsing the .nk in your browser and gives you a single report of anything that fails, which you can export to CSV or PDF and send with the delivery.
Why a checklist beats hoping
The cost of a missed item is not evenly spread - one broken Read or mis-versioned Write can cost a render night or a re-deliver. A consistent, automated pass means the same standard applies to every hand-off, every artist, every time. It pairs naturally with a standard folder structure and clean Write-node naming.
Frequently asked questions
Can I automate this checklist?
Yes. Nuke Studio Hub checks every item - Write paths, versions, Read media, gizmos, folders and ranges - by parsing the .nk in your browser, and exports a report.
Can I attach a report to a delivery?
Yes. Export the audit as a CSV or PDF so the recipient can see the comp passed the checklist.