Shot Delivery Preflight / ProRes flavours

File formats

The six ProRes flavours, explained

A delivery spec that says "ProRes" without a flavour is a trap, and a QT exported with the wrong one is a bounce. Here is the family tree, what each member is for, and how to verify what a file really is.

The family

FlavourFourCCChromaAlphaMeant for
ProRes 422 Proxyapco4:2:2NoOffline edit proxies - small, never delivery
ProRes 422 LTapcs4:2:2NoLighter edit media where storage is tight
ProRes 422apcn4:2:2NoGeneral edit/broadcast work
ProRes 422 HQapch4:2:2NoHigh-quality review and many broadcast deliverables
ProRes 4444ap4h4:4:4:4YesVFX review with alpha, graphics, mastering
ProRes 4444 XQap4x4:4:4:4YesThe highest-fidelity tier for demanding masters

Rule of thumb on size: each step up roughly doubles your storage bill, which is exactly why the wrong-flavour mistake happens in BOTH directions - Proxy sneaks into deliveries from stale export presets, and 4444 XQ sneaks into review uploads that did not need it.

What specs usually mean

How to verify what a file actually is

The flavour is recorded in the QuickTime container: the video track's sample description carries a four-character code (apco / apcs / apcn / apch / ap4h / ap4x). Any media-info tool can show it - and it can be read in the browser from the container atoms without touching the video data, which is how Shot Delivery Preflight identifies every QT in a delivery folder in seconds and flags the flavours outside your spec's allow-list.

Also check while you are there: resolution and frame rate live in the same container structures - and 23.976 vs 24 fps are different deliverables to any ingest system, no matter how alike they look in a player. ProRes and QuickTime are Apple technologies; no affiliation.

FAQ

Does ProRes 422 HQ support alpha?

No - alpha lives in the 4444 family (ProRes 4444 and 4444 XQ, fourcc ap4h/ap4x). If your deliverable needs an embedded alpha, 422-family flavours are automatically wrong.

How can I tell the flavour without opening an app?

Read the fourcc in the video track’s sample description: apco, apcs, apcn, apch, ap4h or ap4x. Media-info tools show it, and browser-side atom parsing (as Shot Delivery Preflight does) reads it without downloading or decoding the video.

Is a bigger flavour always safer?

No - specs are allow-lists, not minimums. A 4444 XQ file against a spec that says 422 HQ can still bounce, and it quadruples upload time on the way. Match the sheet exactly.

Run the check before the client does

Shot Delivery Preflight batch-checks EXR headers, naming and QuickTimes against the delivery spec in your browser - headers only, nothing uploads. 14-day free trial.

Try the example delivery →

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