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Hi everyone,
Very strange request here, as a complete novice on Illustrator. I'm a Premiere Pro editor and usually export some stills into Illustrator to turn into posters, adding text etc., but something very weird and cool happened when I imported my latest still - it went from this...
...to this:
And I have absolutely no idea why! But I like it so much that I want to incorporate the look into the RAW footage colour grade, only I have no idea how to go about finding what Illustrator has done to it to make it look like that! The original is just a PNG file, and the only thing I can think of that triggered a change is that I opened my previous 'Poster Project' and replaced a previous still with this one, and it must have somehow interpreted it differently? Even though the previous still used in the project had no changes or effects on it. I cannot replicate the shift for the life of me!
Any help would be massively appreciated!
Many thanks,
Garry
lustrator does not read or write color profiles in PNG files.
It will assume the color profile of the Illustrator document you place it in.
You can check the Illustrator document profile in Edit > Assign Profile or at the bottom of your document window:
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lustrator does not read or write color profiles in PNG files.
It will assume the color profile of the Illustrator document you place it in.
You can check the Illustrator document profile in Edit > Assign Profile or at the bottom of your document window:
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Thanks Tom, useful to know...I made a note of the settings and then fiddled with them, and sure enough it reverted back to its original colour, although now it won't go back to the cool effect it had before, even if I choose the original settings! Oh well. It'll give me a challenge to try and replicate the freaky image during colour grading 🙂
Thanks for the reply,
Garry
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Apologies, Ton...not Tom.
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You didn't tell us when this happened in your project:
- after exporting the file as a PNG (see Ton's answer)
- when importing a PNG that you exported from somewhere else or that was a screenshot
So if Ton's answer did not solve your issue, can you then please be more precise?
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Thanks for the reply.
So as I said in my original post, it happened on import to Illustrator. I made a note of the document's Colour Profile settings after reading Ton's post, changed them, and sure enough it reverted back to the original file's look. I can't now replicate the initial import look, but it's not a big deal, it'll give me something to work on.
Thanks again,
Garry
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Garry, if it happens by converting from your Premiere export profile to the profile of your Illustrator document when you imported the file, you should be able to do the same conversion in Photoshop.
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Thanks Ton, I was actually a lot more amateurish than that, it's a screenshot of the frame in Premiere (so my Mac created the PNG file), and then that's what I imported into the already-made Illustrator project which was in CMYK using U.S. Web Coated (SWOP) v2. I've managed to replicate the look by really crushing shadows and blacks, but I'm sure you guys would have a far more professional way of doing it!
Thanks again for the help, it was much appreciated.
Garry
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Good to hear you've got it working.
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Garry,
Why not just let your Mac do the dirty job again (someone has to do it), and get the real(ly tormented) thing? Presuming the image size/resolution is right, of course. And you can do it/try it out again when you are in the mood.
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Yes, that would be: Export from Premiere, convert to Display, assign sRGB (without converting color numbers), convert to U.S. Web Coated (SWOP) v2 CMYK.
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I'm liking these replies very much!! Now I have a proper workflow for getting the look I somehow chanced upon!
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And by they way: I get it why you want that.
I like that blueish look of that image. Achieving the results caused by assigning the wrong color profile can be close to impossible using image editing functionality. But wouldn't you need color grading settings in order to get that into a video?
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Yes, usually you can apply a LUT whilst video editing, which sounds similar to assigning a colour profile, so I thought if I could figure out what was going on in Illustrator then maybe I could apply the same ‘look’ in Premiere. Turns out it’s actually been quite easy to replicate through normal colour grading, by just really jacking up the blacks and shadows, and boosting that blue tinge! I’m sure there are more exact ways of getting the look back through Photoshop, After Effects etc. but I’ve been lucky enough to replicate it directly in Premiere!