You can fix color, tone, and exposure issues in video using Premiere Pro. Learn how to improve your video footage using effects, masks, adjustments, and more.
Overview
Syllabus
Introduction
- Welcome
- What you should know before watching this course
- Using the exercise files
- Set up a Color Correction workspace
- Using the Waveform Monitor
- Using the Vectorscope
- Using the RGB Parade
- Toggling an effect to compare
- Using adjustment layers
- Adding masks
- Applying an Input LUT
- Fixing your white balance
- Getting a properly toned image
- Restoring the correct saturation
- Saving basic corrections as an Input LUT
- Applying a Creative Look
- Adjusting filmic qualities
- Sharpening your video
- Adjusting color stylistically
- Saving creative corrections as a Look
- What is a curve?
- Using RGB curves
- Using Hue Saturation Curves
- Balancing color with color wheels
- The role of secondary correction
- Creating a selection for secondary correction
- Refining a selection to avoid jitter
- Copying, pasting, and removing attributes
- Creating presets
- Managing Looks and LUTs
- The Levels effect
- Relighting a scene with the Lighting Effects effect
- Stabilizing exposure with the Color Stabilizer effect in After Effects
- The Change Color effect and Change to Color effect
- Neutralizing color with the CC Color Neutralizer in After Effects
- Removing grain with After Effects
- Using Red Giant Denoiser
- Using Neat Video
- When to keyframe an effect
- Adding keyframes
- Smoothing keyframe transitions with handles
- Fixing overexposed footage
- Fixing underexposed footage
- Adding a stylized vignette or border
- Adding contrast with a black-and-white effect
- Why shoot raw video?
- Working with a .R3D file
- Working with a DPX sequence
- Why legalize?
- Using the Video Limiter effect
- Goodbye
Taught by
Richard Harrington