Larry Kropp
February 21st, 2012, 11:19 PM
Can anyone tell me how to adjust the white balance in post with Adobe Premiere Pro CS5.5? Thanks
Larry
Larry
View Full Version : Re-Setting White Balance in Premiere Pro CS 5.5 Larry Kropp February 21st, 2012, 11:19 PM Can anyone tell me how to adjust the white balance in post with Adobe Premiere Pro CS5.5? Thanks Larry Oren Arieli February 22nd, 2012, 12:03 AM Adobe Premiere Color Correction with Vectorscope - YouTube Allan Tabilas February 22nd, 2012, 12:57 AM Additionally the Fast color corrector filter has a relatively quick "white balance" adjustment also if you don't need to much correction. Adobe Premiere Pro CS5 & CS5.5 * Fast Color Corrector effect (http://help.adobe.com/en_US/premierepro/cs/using/WSADD77271-CFC3-48fe-B973-03DF5754F177a.html) White Balance Assigns a white balance to an image using the Eyedropper tool to sample a target color in the image or anywhere on your monitor’s desktop. You can also click the color swatch to open the Adobe Color Picker and select a color to define the white balance. Larry Kropp February 22nd, 2012, 10:28 PM Allan and Oren thank you very much for the information. The links sure help me understand things much better. I've spent the last hour playing with the Fast Color Corrector just following along with my P.P. open and doing the same thing they were doing on on the You Tube video. Boy is this going to be a welcome addition to my video editing. Alan I like the idea of the quick white balance adjustment but I'm still not real clear on how to use or apply it. It's getting late so I will reivew the information in the link a bit later so I can understand that option better. It sounds quick and neat. I might have a few more questions when I'm done so if you both could please check back on this Thread I would appreicate it and thanks again for your time. Larry Allan Tabilas February 23rd, 2012, 04:32 PM Hi Larry. Imagine you shot a dance performance scene with your camera with some dancers that was a bit too yellow or too orange. You wanted to cool the temperature a bit. So with the "white balance" setting in the fast color corrector filter, you pointed the picker and hovered over one of the dancers' skin as a sample color for the color swatch. This quick adjustment will make the overall scene a bit cooler. Walter Brokx February 29th, 2012, 01:15 PM It would be nice if there was (or is and I just haven't found it yet) an effect with a temperatuur-slider and a magenta-green slider (which can be controlled numerically as well), just like in Camera-raw. In that case you can control the relative colortemperature compared to the footage. Eric Lagerlof March 1st, 2012, 12:09 AM Walter, an interesting idea. Larry, if you look at the vectorscope carefully, you'll see little boxes toward the outer ring that have letters in them [ R ] , [ Cy ], etc for the colors of the color bars signal. [ R ] = Red, [ Cy ] = Cyan (turqoise blue), etc. When working with balancing colors, if something is too green and you look to the direct opposite part of the wheel you see Mg for Magenta. So, you can cut down the Green -- or add Mg. But with only RGB color controls you add Mg by adding both Red and Blue. I say this not because it's easy or quicker, but because its a good way to train you and your eyes to recognize how rgb colors work and combine to make up the coloration you see in a picture. Also, remember not only to see how 'white' is tinted but how the blacks are too. If you have an area of blacks in the image and you're using a color corrector that allows you to alter the black level via the pedestal/level controls, bring up the blacks to a medium gray and you can more easily see if they are 'tinted' or neutral. Again, software can do all of this automatically for you most of the time. But it is always good to know what's going on if you need to fine tune. Larry Kropp March 3rd, 2012, 10:57 PM I'll try this when I get a bit of time. Thanks all for helping on this question. |