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Color Correction with Lumetri Basics

Lesson 48 from: Adobe Premiere Pro Fundamentals

Philip Ebiner

Color Correction with Lumetri Basics

Lesson 48 from: Adobe Premiere Pro Fundamentals

Philip Ebiner

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Lesson Info

48. Color Correction with Lumetri Basics

Lessons

Class Trailer

Chapter 1: Introduction

1

Class Introduction

01:41
2

Starting a New Project and Premiere Pro Orientation

12:33
3

Importing and Organizing

07:24
4

Quick Win - Stablize Your Videos

02:40
5

CC 2020 Updates

02:31
6

Quiz: Chapter 1: Introduction

Chapter 2: Editing Your Video

7

Starting a New Sequence and Understanding the Timeline

05:55
8

Adding Clips to the Timeline, Syncing Footage, and Making Selects

12:17
9

Exercise Syncing Video and Audio

01:03
10

Exercise Review Syncing Video and Audio

03:09
11

Editing Tools

16:14
12

Adding bRoll Footage to Your Video

10:42
13

Adjusting Clip Size and Position

04:01
14

REVIEW Adjusting Clip Size and Position

01:49
15

Bonus - Editing Down an Interview

34:47
16

Editing a Narrative Scene

10:07
17

Update CC 2018 - Opening Multiple Projects in Premiere Pro CC 2018

03:49
18

Update CC 2018 - Close Gaps in Premiere Pro CC 2018

01:36
19

CC 2020 Update - Auto Reframe

05:42
20

Quiz: Chapter 2: Editing Your Video

Chapter 3: Adding Video and Audio Transitions

21

Class Check In

00:51
22

Adding Video Transitions and EXERCISE

08:25
23

Exercise Review Video Transitions

02:27
24

Adding Audio Transitions

03:36
25

Exercise - Create a Custom Blur Transition

07:18
26

Trouble with Transitions

06:36
27

Quiz: Chapter 3: Adding Video and Audio Transitions

Chapter 4: Creating Titles (Adobe Premiere Pro CC 2017.1 and newer)

28

Update CC 2018 - New Titles in Premiere Pro CC 2017.1 - the Essential Graphics

07:51
29

Update CC 2018 - Animating Your Title Cards

05:44
30

Update CC 2018 - Saving Titles as Preset Graphics

02:16
31

Update CC 2018 - Essential Graphics Updates

10:27
32

CC 2020 Update - Underlining and Renaming Shape Layers

01:56
33

Quiz: Chapter 4: Creating Titles (Adobe Premiere Pro CC 2017.1 and newer)

Chapter 5: Editing Audio

34

Adjusting Audio Levels in Premiere Pro

10:16
35

Adjusting Audio Channels

05:05
36

Update CC 2017 - Editing Audio with the Essential Sound Panel

07:57
37

Fixing Audio with the Low and High Pass Filters

04:17
38

Improving Audio with EQ (Equalization)

39

Adjusting Audio Tracks with Effects

02:14
40

Exercise - Fixing Bad Audio

00:41
41

Exercise Review - Remove Bad Background Noise

04:32
42

Adding Music to Your Project and Making a Song Shorter

11:24
43

Easily Removing Background Noise with Audacity

05:17
44

Update CC 2019 - Reduce Reverb and Reduce Noise Sliders

02:47
45

Parametric EQ Tutorial in Premiere Pro

04:42
46

Remove Echo in Premiere Pro with Parametric Equalizer

05:28
47

Quiz: Chapter 5: Editing Audio

Chapter 6: Color Correction and Grading

48

Color Correction with Lumetri Basics

08:43
49

Exercise - Fix White Balance UPDATE

00:38
50

Exercise Review - Fix White Balance UPDATE

02:30
51

Creative Tab - Lumetri Color

05:30
52

Curves Tab - Lumetri Color

03:50
53

Color Wheels - Lumetri Color

01:51
54

HSL Secondary - Lumetri Color

03:40
55

Vignette - Lumetri Color

02:49
56

Exercise - Matching Exposure

00:55
57

Exercise Review - Matching Exposure

04:43
58

Color Correction with Adjustment Layers

06:08
59

Update CC 2018 - Adding Multiple Lumetri Color Effects

03:42
60

Update CC 2019 - Selective Color Grading

02:30
61

Applying Color Effects to Specific Parts of Video with Mask Tracking

04:16
62

Quiz: Chapter 6: Color Correction and Grading

Chapter 7: Motion in Premiere Pre

63

Adding Motion to Title Graphics

04:37
64

Add the Ken Burns Effect to Photos

02:22
65

Exercise - Add Motion to Video to Make it More Dynamic

01:14
66

Exercise Review - Add Motion to Video to Make it More Dynamic

06:14
67

OPTIONAL Adding Motion to Screenshots

08:05
68

Quiz: Chapter 7: Motion in Premiere Pre

Chapter 8: Exporting Your Video

69

Exporting a High-Quality, Small File-Size Video

05:32
70

OPTIONAL - Export Settings - In Depth Review

12:02
71

Export a Full Resolution Video

01:28
72

Exporting Small File-Size Preview Video

01:45
73

Practice Exercise - Finish Class Project

01:03
74

Quiz: Chapter 8: Exporting Your Video

Chapter 9: Visual Effects and Advanced Premiere Pro Tips

75

Adding and Adjusting Effects to Your Video Clips

06:55
76

Adjusting Effects with Keyframes

04:42
77

Using Lumetri Color Presets

03:35
78

Stabilize Shaky Footage with Warp Stabilizer

05:21
79

Exercise - Stabilize Shaky Video

00:36
80

Exercise Review - Stabilize Shaky Video

02:46
81

Make Footage More Cinematic with Overlays

06:44
82

Capture Still Images from Video

01:41
83

EXERCISE - Remove Noise and Grain from Video Clip

02:55
84

Quiz: Chapter 9: Visual Effects and Advanced Premiere Pro Tips

Chapter 10: Video Speed in Premiere Pro

85

Adjusting Clip Speed

05:10
86

Time Remapping and Speed Ramps

03:54
87

CC 2020 Update - Time Remapping up to 20,000%

02:20
88

Slow Motion Video By Interpreting Frame Rates

01:56
89

Exercise - Speed Ramps

01:28
90

Exercise Review - Speed Ramps

00:57
91

Quiz: Chapter 10: Video Speed in Premiere Pro

Chapter 11: Green Screen Editing - Chromakeying in Premiere Pro

92

Green Screen Tutorial (ChromaKeying) in Premiere Pro

07:37
93

Adding a Background to Green Screen Video

05:45
94

Quiz: Chapter 11: Green Screen Editing - Chromakeying in Premiere Pro

Chapter 12: Conclusion

95

Conclusion

00:55

Final Quiz

96

Final Quiz

Lesson Info

Color Correction with Lumetri Basics

Let's learn how to color correct your video in premiere pro with the latest version of Creative cloud. They have a very powerful color corrector built into adobe premiere Pro that really any colorist unless you're doing a professional feature film, you might want to use a different program. But for anyone that's making videos on their own, you can color correct your footage very powerfully in premiere pro go up to your window and then change to your workspace to color. This will open up the blue metric scopes window over here and then the lumia tree color panel over here. And this is what we're going to be doing to edit our video, select the clip that you want to edit. And then I just want to show you why we do that because if we go over to our effects controls really quickly, nothing has changed. But as soon as we make any changes over here in the luminary color panel, it will apply this luminary color effect to this clip. So watch me as I just drag any of these sliders to the left, c...

heck that out. The elementary color panel apply. Effect applies over here and it can be adjusted just like any effect turned on and off. You can also adjust all of these sliders over here on the left, but it's harder to see and use and that's why I use the luminary color panel over here. Let me just Delete that one more time. Go back to my scopes and I'm going to be showing you why we use scopes to color correct our footage in this first video. We're just going over the basic correction tab over here. You can see that there's multiple tabs and multiple ways to edit your video. And we're going to go through all of these in the future lessons. But first let's start with basic correction going from the top to bottom. The first thing is input lut. Now you might have heard me mention before that we shot this video with a Sony camera that used a raw sort of format called S log three, meaning this doesn't have a lot of contrast already. It doesn't have a lot of saturation. We apply that afterwards a lot or a look up. Table is sort of a filter that can be applied to this footage. Now we shot an SGB three and you can actually install and find specific look up tables for your camera and the way that you shoot online or maybe it comes with your camera already. They don't have an S log three input with the latest update to Creative cloud. What I like to use is the Amira Rec 709. So if I click on that, you can see that applies a look to this. Now this doesn't look great. It's too bright and we need to make some changes but then we can go down to the rest of these things say exposure, drop the exposure just a bit. If we need to add more contrast or less contrast, we can do that. But the look up table is a place to start. So that's one way to edit your footage. I'm not going to use the look up table though. I'm just going to edit this as if we didn't have any look up tables or as if you were shooting with your own camera and you didn't need to use a look up table. So moving past the lut, we have white balance, you have a white balanced selector which allows you to click on this color picker, find anything in your video that has no saturation, like something that's white or even something that's gray. It can't be overexposed though. So these behind Anthony, we had these curtains right here. It's a little bit too exposed right here. If I choose that, it doesn't really do anything because there's no information there, it's overexposed. But if I go over here where there's some gray, it does affect the temperature and the tint sliders, see it added a little bit more blue and it added a little bit more magenta. We can go in here and add more blue if we want or make it more warm. Say we didn't like that blue that I added, We wanted to be a little bit more warm. We can do that just by dragging up or down on the slider and same with the tint, we can drag to the left to make it more green or to the right to make it more magenta. I'm gonna undo that just by pressing control Z. Or command Z. If you're on a Mac, you can also type in a specific number if you want by clicking on this number and typing in the specific number that you want to use. So that's how you quickly adjust the white balance. The color picker is the best way to do it. If you have something in your clip that is white or neutral. Next we have tone. All these sliders adjust the brightness or the darkness of different parts of your footage exposure affects everything in your clip. So everything becomes darker, everything becomes brighter To reset. You can just double click on the slider bar and it will reset to zero contrast. If I drag to the right actually makes the darks darker and the brights brighter and you can see over here, look at the scopes, see what's happening first. Let's go back to exposure. If I bring drag to the right, everything's becoming brighter because at the top of the scopes it's the brights, it's the whites at the bottom, it's the darks and the blacks. So if I go all the way to the left, everything becomes black. The goal is if you have blacks and whites in your frame to have something's touching zero at the bottom and something's touching whites at the top 100. So with contrast when we add contrast, it's expanding the colors or the brightness and darkness. And because this image is so flat, this is good. We want to add contrast. So you can do that with the contrast slider. You can also do that with the rest of these sliders down below the highlights, will just adjust the highlights, the bright parts of the footage. These shadows will just adjust the shadows, the darker parts, the whites and the blacks are even brighter and even darker. So the whites are just the really highlight parts and the blacks are the very dark parts of your frame. So with the blacks were really going to crank these down quite a bit the same with the shadows, trying to get the bottom of this graph to touch. And that's because we do have some pure black things in this footage. This camera lens right here, that's pure black. So that should actually be very close to the bottom and we have whites up here with the the curtains behind. So those should be close to the top and I'm going to do that. But I'm also actually gonna bring down the highlights. So we don't overexpose Anthony's face. You can see though one thing that one issue we're having is that this image is very unsaturated, thankfully we have the saturation slider and when we're shooting with s log three, it's very unsaturated. So if we drag the saturation all the way to the right, we're getting more to a natural look. If 200 isn't enough, we can actually type in something higher than where the slider goes to 50 might be a little bit too much to 25. That might be exactly where we want to be or close to it. So this is the basic color correction tab. This is where you want to start, This is where a lot of people just stay, you don't even have to go down to all of the rest of these effects in the loo metric panel, you can get a pretty cool and pretty proper color correction here. If we want to take it a step further to grading, I just want to explain really quickly what grading is versus color correction. Grading is giving it more of a stylistic look and that's what we're going to be doing mostly with the rest of these tabs, giving it more of a style, more of a cool filter. That's what a grade looks, warming it up to make it look happier because it's warmer or cooling it down to make it look more depressing or sad and we can do that with things like the sliders up here. But you can really do it with some of these sliders and tools down below. So in the next video we're going to move on to the creative panel. Uh and for now just play around with the basic correction and start practicing with the clips that you have on your own sequence

Class Materials

Bonus Materials with Purchase

Interview Clips for Windows Users
Exericise Resources
Resources for Premiere Pro Course

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