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Exporting videos orange

New Here ,
Apr 19, 2022 Apr 19, 2022

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This issue just started yesterday for me and I have tried everything. I edit my video like normal, do my basic color correction and go to export. Even in the preview, everything looks perfect, the colors are exactly how I want them. I export like normal- H.264, match source adaptive medium or high bitrate but when it exports it overexposes and messes with the color. Pics attached. I even watched the exported video on my phone and it's all orange. Nothing has changed about how I record. The only thing that changed is Premiere Pro updated for me recently. 

 

 

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correct answers 2 Correct answers

Community Expert , Apr 19, 2022 Apr 19, 2022

Might want to watch this video:

Premiere Pro V22 - Understanding Color Spaces, HDR, and what that might mean to you - YouTube

 

On a side note: if you are in a non-HDR environment Nits will have no effect.

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LEGEND , Apr 19, 2022 Apr 19, 2022

As Ann's links will tell you, you have probably HLG media there ... an HDR format. To use that on an SDR standard Rec.709 timeline you need to tell Premiere which color space to use, as it will use the clip's color space until you tell it to use Rec.709 to match the sequence.

 

So ... go to your affected clips in the bin, select one or all ... right-click/Modify/Interpret Footage, and set the Override option to Rec.709.

 

Neil

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Community Expert ,
Apr 19, 2022 Apr 19, 2022

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Can you try changing HDR Graphics White (Nits) from 203 to 300?

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New Here ,
Apr 19, 2022 Apr 19, 2022

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Just tried it, still giving me an orange huge after export. 

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New Here ,
Apr 19, 2022 Apr 19, 2022

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hue*

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Community Expert ,
Apr 19, 2022 Apr 19, 2022

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I think this is what's happening - it says one way is to use Rec.709:

https://community.adobe.com/t5/premiere-pro-discussions/faq-how-to-fix-saturated-over-exposed-hlg-cl...

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Community Expert ,
Apr 19, 2022 Apr 19, 2022

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Might want to watch this video:

Premiere Pro V22 - Understanding Color Spaces, HDR, and what that might mean to you - YouTube

 

On a side note: if you are in a non-HDR environment Nits will have no effect.

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LEGEND ,
Apr 19, 2022 Apr 19, 2022

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As Ann's links will tell you, you have probably HLG media there ... an HDR format. To use that on an SDR standard Rec.709 timeline you need to tell Premiere which color space to use, as it will use the clip's color space until you tell it to use Rec.709 to match the sequence.

 

So ... go to your affected clips in the bin, select one or all ... right-click/Modify/Interpret Footage, and set the Override option to Rec.709.

 

Neil

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New Here ,
Aug 31, 2022 Aug 31, 2022

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  • This solved my issue with my HDR nVidia Shadowplay footage turning orangprofessional. (Over-saturated may be the real term). This override option made the preview render look under saturated but it was correct upon export. Thank you Mr. Haugen, you are a true peofessional.

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