In Flame, a project is a job-based working environment that provides:
You can edit a project's settings through the course of your job. A project is associated with a default resolution that incorporates frame width and height, aspect ratio, scan mode, and bit depth. Although the default resolution in no way restricts you from working with other resolutions, it does define default settings such as:
When you set a default resolution, you usually select a project configuration template file that corresponds to that resolution. For example, if you set your project's default resolution to NTSC, the ntsc.cfg project configuration template is usually used to create the configuration file for your project. The project configuration file sets environment display parameters such as monitor refresh rate and default timecode for clips.
This chapter describes how to select a default resolution and select a project configuration template. Remember, however, that all the parameters associated with a project's default resolution in no way restrict you from working with other resolutions. To learn about creating a project for use with clips of different resolutions, see Working with Multi-Format Input and Output.
Projects also provide a home directory on the system disk that contains sample setups and LUTs. These sample resources are situated in subdirectories for each module. Through the course of your project, you can save setups, EDLs, custom LUTs, and any other file-based resources in these directories. Because these directories are the default path for saving and loading resources such as effects setups, keeping files here accelerates your work.
Accessing Projects on Remote Framestores
You can access an Autodesk Visual Effects and Finishing project on a remote framestore from Flame. This is useful if you want to prepare a project already created in an Visual Effects and Finishing application for finishing but do not want to tie up system resources.
You can only access a remote framestore on start-up. If you try to access a remote project that is already open in another application, you will not have access to the project's Desktop, only to the project's clip library. This way you do not run the risk of overwriting someone's work or losing your own. Although the clip library will be read-only, you can navigate to other clip libraries belonging to the project and perform clip management operations.
Sharing Projects between Autodesk Products
You can open projects created in Flame in other Autodesk Visual Effects and Finishing applications installed on your workstation. Projects created in all products are stored in a single directory — /usr/discreet/project. The Project box in the start-up screen and in the Preferences menu list projects from both product sets. The default project that appears in the list is the last one opened in either product type.
You can load and use projects in all products transparently with the exception of the clips on the EditDesk and Desktop. When you use a project in both product sets, a separate Desktop and EditDesk is stored for each. Therefore, the clips that you leave on the Desktop in Inferno, Flame, or Flint for example, will not be accessible on the EditDesk when you load the project in Smoke or Backdraft Conform.