Codecs

What Is a DPX File?

DPX (Digital Picture Exchange) is an image file format used in film and television post-production. It stores individual frames as separate files, creating image sequences that are ideal for VFX work and color grading.

Technical Specifications

  • Bit depth: Supports 8-bit, 10-bit, 12-bit, and 16-bit per channel.
  • Color space: Typically Log or Linear, with metadata for color interpretation.
  • Compression: Usually uncompressed, though RLE compression is supported.
  • File extension: .dpx
  • Channels: RGB, RGBA, or other configurations.

DPX File Sizes

Because DPX files are typically uncompressed, they're large:

ResolutionBit DepthFile Size/Frame1 Min @ 24fps
2K (2048×1080)10-bit~8 MB~11 GB
4K (4096×2160)10-bit~32 MB~46 GB
4K (4096×2160)16-bit~50 MB~72 GB

When to Use DPX

DPX is commonly used in:

  • Film scanning: DPX is the standard format for digitizing film negatives.
  • Color grading: Colorists often work with DPX sequences for maximum quality.
  • VFX handoff: DPX provides frame-accurate, high-quality source for visual effects.
  • DCP mastering: DPX sequences feed into DCP creation.

DPX vs EXR

Both are image sequence formats, but they serve different purposes:

  • DPX: Simpler format, widely supported, standard for color grading and film scanning. Typically 10-bit or 16-bit.
  • EXR: More advanced format (developed by ILM), supports 32-bit float, multiple layers, and arbitrary metadata. Preferred for VFX compositing.

Transferring DPX Files

DPX sequences present unique transfer challenges:

  • Massive size: A feature film's DPX master can be 100TB or more.
  • Many small files: Thousands of individual frames per sequence.
  • Sequence integrity: Missing frames break the sequence.

Handrive handles DPX transfers effectively:

  • No per-GB fees: Transfer terabytes of DPX without cost.
  • No file count limits: Send thousands of frames in one share.
  • Direct P2P: Files go straight to the recipient without cloud intermediary.

Learn how colorists transfer DPX and other large formats:

File Transfer for Colorists: ProRes, DPX, and EXR →