PAGE IN CONSTRUCTION
Setting up a Colour Workspace in Premiere Pro
Premiere Pro has a preset workspace intended for colour correction and grading.
Navigate to the ‘Color’ workspace
Open your Lumetri Scopes panel in the source panel when using Lumetri Colour to view your colour scopes.
If you can’t see the ‘Color’ panel on your premiere pro interface, click ‘Window’, ‘Workspaces’ & then ‘Color’.
Scopes
Scopes are helpful visual aids in the colour correction and grading process.
Basic Correction
Double click on a slider to reset any changes made.
Input LUT: Use this to apply a preset colour adjustment.
Temperature: Measures colour on a warm-cool spectrum.
Cold: Blue, green & purple tones Warm: Orange, red & yellow tones
This is the easiest tool for correcting white balance issues.
Tint: A shade or type of colour.
This is useful when paired with alterations in temperature to correct white balance issues.
Saturation: The intensity of the colours in your footage.
Bright and vivid colours indicate high saturation, whereas subdued colours indicate low saturation.
Exposure: The amount of light in your footage.
If your footage is too light it is overexposed, if it’s too dark it is underexposed.
Contrast: The difference between individual hues that make elements in your footage distinguishable.
Extremely bright and dark parts indicate high contrast, a range of tones indicate medium contrast and no pure whites and blacks, with a range of medium tones indicate low contrast.
Highlights, shadows, whites & blacks are similar but not exactly the same.
Highlights: The brightness in your footage.
Use this slider to brighten the footage without altering the whites. This can be used along with the ‘whites’ slider to ensure the footage doesn’t become “blown out.”
Shadows: A dark area where light has been blocked by an object.
Use this slider to darken the footage without altering the blacks. This can be used along with the ‘blacks’ slider, to stop the footage from losing detail.
Whites: The white point in your footage, that alters the brightness of your footage.
Use this slider to adjust the white point in your footage - generally using this before your ‘highlights’ slider is better because you can set your white point and alter the highlights from there.
Blacks: The black point in your footage, that alters the darkness of your footage.
Use this slider to adjust the black point in your footage - generally using this before your ‘shadows’ slider is better because you can set your black point and alter the shadows from there.
The check mark in the top right hand corner of the ‘Basic Correction’ tab allows you to preview your changes.
Creative
Look: This can be used to apply a LUT - move the Intensity slider to alter the intensity of the LUT.
Adjustments
Faded Film: Increasing this slider will add a faded look on your footage.
You can get a similar effect in Basic Correction when you increase the Blacks
Sharpen: Increase or decrease the sharpness of your footage.
When you decrease the sharpness of your footage it can appear out of focus.
Vibrance: Alters colour of the muted tone in the footage. Already prominent colours will stay the same.
Saturation: Alters overall colour of the footage.
Shadow Tint: Change shadow colour in footage
Will apply to all - can produce some extreme/ unnatural effects.
Highlight Tint: Change highlight colour in footage
Will apply to all - can produce some extreme/ unnatural effects.
Add Comment