Skip to main content
ericg2387310
Known Participant
October 9, 2019
Answered

How to transition a clip gradually from color to black and white while it's moving and scaling?

  • October 9, 2019
  • 4 replies
  • 8558 views

I'm shrinking a full-screen color clip down to a small square in a grid of black-and-white photos, and I'd like to transition the color to B/W as it moves. I know I can duplicate the clip and its scale and movement attributes in B/W, layer it over the color clip and fade it in as it moves. But is there a more elegant way to do this in Premiere? 

    This topic has been closed for replies.
    Correct answer Michael Grenadier

    You could apply a lumetri color correction to the clip and keyframe the saturation....

    4 replies

    Legend
    October 9, 2019

    it's important sometimes to just admit you're smart and doing something the right way. One shouldn't confuse the word 'elegant' with the word ' simpler' just to be faster. The way the computer works your method is the best already.

    🙂

     

    ericg2387310
    Known Participant
    October 9, 2019
    Thanks, Rodney, and thanks, all. I guess I'll leave it as it is and play with Lumetri at another time.
    Legend
    October 10, 2019
    I think that's the fastest and best way for what you're doing ( the keyframing in Lumetri would be the same time probably). But keep it in mind ( the posts re: going to lumetri) cause there may be times you want to deal with real chroma values ( color ) and use the tools there.
    Legend
    October 9, 2019

    I would try something else... make a copy of your color clips with full screen start and paste that into your timeline and make it black and white and save it. So, that's done and won't have to be done again in the background ( rendered etc. as you work ), and the movement is already baked in. Now move the color above the black and white and when you want the thing to begin turning black and white use fade out on the color clip. When it settles into the grid it will be black and white, and I think there will be less demand on your computer resources to make it happen right.

     

    🙂

     

    R Neil Haugen
    Legend
    October 9, 2019

    Mgrenadier had the best suggestion. Lumetri panel is the heart of the Color workspace in Premiere and the best color/tonal tools in the app. And yes can be keyframed.

     

    Neil

    Everyone's mileage always varies ...
    Michael GrenadierCorrect answer
    Legend
    October 9, 2019

    You could apply a lumetri color correction to the clip and keyframe the saturation....

    ericg2387310
    Known Participant
    October 9, 2019
    Yeah, that makes sense. I haven't done a lot of Lumetri color correction; I was looking everywhere else. Many thanks.