Mr. Neil.
Inside Common Folder, I created Two folders, Technical and Creative folders. I noticed, If I copy Paste all the LUTs Into Technical Folder, inside Premiere, the LUTs appear Inside the Basic Corrections- Input LUT Panel. And If I copy paste all the LUTs Inside the Creative folder, Inside Premiere the LUTs appear Inside the Creative- Look Pannel. You told me never to use the LUTs from Basic Pannel. So Technically, do I have to copy Paste all the LUTs Into Creative Folder only?
I am assuming that the Creative Folder Is If I want to copy past any Looks ??
If you are shooting for example with Canon Cinestyle, or Sony S-Log's, Do you add any LUTs?
Thank you very much
I wouldn't say 'never' apply LUTs from the Basic tab ... but it's not a particularly safe place to do so. IF something is clipped by the LUT, you'd then have to add say an RGB Curves effect 'above' Lumetri in the ECP to bring the data back in place. And ... even if it doesn't clip, you may not have an optimal melding of the media & LUT.
I occasionally will use the Basic tab folder just to play with it. But ... I put everything I really use in the Creative folder.
I work a range of media, testing all sorts of things, or working on jobs. If needed for working with camera corrective LUTs, I do park them in the Creative folder.
For organization purposes, I do rename them ... that list will be in "computerese" alpha-numeric order. So remember about numbers ... "190" will appear before "20". Unless you use the same number of characters in all numbers. So if you use numbers, use either all in two-character form ... 01, 04, 19, ... or three-character form ... 001, 026, 345.
Numbers come before letters in computer-a/n work. So if you name say all corrective camera LUTs with a one-digit number, you have ten (counting zero!) different options for base camera separation. Say all your Canon "style" LUTs start with the number 0, all your Sony are maybe 4- ... and on.
Then have the name of the LUT. So it could be "1 Canon Cine1", 1 Canon Cine2", "4 S-log1", "4 S-log2" and on.
Then general corrective LUTs start with a 2. "Feel" LUTs with 3-9.
This way you can quickly scroll to the LUTs you need at the moment.
Neil