Frame grabs are square-pixel extracts from 8-bit uncompressed timelines in Final Cut Pro at either 1920x1080 or 1280x720 sizes depending on the source clips. Images are named TX-[number]-[camera]-[condition], where: - number is the scene number - camera is a short identifier for each camera model - condition is an optional qualifier for what makes the image different. Unless otherwise specified, the F350 recorded 1080i/60 at 35Mbit/sec; the HVX200 recorded 1080i/60; the JVC used the 16x standard lens at 720p/30, and the Canon used the 20x lens at 1080i/60. Some frame grabs have different scene numbers in their filenames compared to the scene number in the image itself: Scenes 1-4 are all ChromaDuMonde charts, while scenes 5-8 are all MultiBurst charts. Different scene numbers are used for captures at 60i vs. 50i vs 24p vs 24p with shutter. Scenes 44-50 are all separate takes of Mike Curtis running. In all these cases, a common scene number has been used in file naming to make it easier to find comparable scenes. Note: frames range in size from 160 kB to 1 MB. High quality JPEG compression (Photoshop 7 "Save For Web", quality 80) was used to avoid introducing new artifacts, so image files are LARGE!