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tengo problemas con el color del video en premier pro, anteriomente importaba los videos y le bajaba la calidad del tono, fui a color lumetri y en espacio de color en uso le deje la opción Rec. 709 y se arreglo. Pero cuando exporto el video, baja la calidad el color no permanece como lo grabe en el iphone o camara.
si pudieran ayudarme, ya instale y desinstalƩ el programa varias veces jaja!
Si pudieran dejarme algunas fotos de ayuda o tutorial.
Mod note: I changed your title. Please don't type in all caps.
Its all about color:
First, you don't have "Display Color Management", near the top of the Settings tab, on. So Premiere doesn't 'look' at your monitor situation, and must assume you have a correctly calibrated Rec.709 screen. Which ... you most certainly do not have. So turn on that setting.
Second ... your Mac is probably one that doesn't have Reference modes available. And on those, Apple sets a wrong display transform for Rec.709 video. Apple uses essentially a gamma 1.96 transform, notably brighter in the shado
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Its all about color:
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First, you don't have "Display Color Management", near the top of the Settings tab, on. So Premiere doesn't 'look' at your monitor situation, and must assume you have a correctly calibrated Rec.709 screen. Which ... you most certainly do not have. So turn on that setting.
Second ... your Mac is probably one that doesn't have Reference modes available. And on those, Apple sets a wrong display transform for Rec.709 video. Apple uses essentially a gamma 1.96 transform, notably brighter in the shadows. They also do not correctly remap Rec.709's sRGB color hue values to the Retina native P3, so the color is both less visually saturated, and some tones are just off.
Macs with Reference modes set to HDTV, and all other viewing devices from broadcast spec systems through Android through PCs through TVs use the correct display transform, and will see an image with darker shadows and more color saturation.
You can check by comparing Qt player and VLC or Potplayer on your Mac.
You can set the viewing gamma of Premiere's Program monitor to gamma 1.96/Qt if you like. The image within Premiere will then pretty closely match that of Qt Player.
The rest of the world will see that file as darker, of course ... and there isn't a 'fix'. It just is.
By the way, no professional media is ever graded to gamma 1.96. It is always graded on a specced out gamma 2.4 system.
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