/t5/premiere-pro-ideas/dehaze-in-premiere/idc-p/12113756#M19308Jun 14, 2021
Jun 14, 2021
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The bit from Ann's suggested YouTube video about using an inverted bw copy of a clip (dragged above original clip) then using the Subtract blend mode is pretty cool ... liked that!
/t5/premiere-pro-ideas/dehaze-in-premiere/idc-p/12116178#M19310Jun 15, 2021
Jun 15, 2021
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Thanks very much for the suggestions. I am a newbie to Premiere and have been using Photoshop and Lightroom for about ten years, I took some drone footage and wanted to enhance the sky as it was somewhat blown out. Using lightroom and photoshop for a still image I can make the sky pop and mask out the areas I don't want to pop. In Premiere I have not found a way to isolate just the sky. Thanks again for any recommendations.
/t5/premiere-pro-ideas/dehaze-in-premiere/idc-p/15139783#M19312Feb 07, 2025
Feb 07, 2025
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Yeah there is no Dehaze tool in Premier pro, but there is i believe in Adobe Premiere Elements, But in Premier pro it is easy to remove haze just as good in dehaze, raise up the contrast, then more shadows, than more blacks, you have to figure out what balance depending on the footage every one's will be different, also the unsharp mask will also help with that. here is a link to a youtube tutorial on how to dehaze video using the unsharp tool.
it's a 2 min video.
Now Davinci Resolve does have a dehaze tool, in my opinion if you get to learn Davinci Resolve, it does a better job in exposure and color grading than Premier pro, and the good thing is you pay for it once Around $300.00 and no monthly cost, and you do get all the updates free.
Now i do have Davinci Resolve the latest verson and i use both preier pro and Davinci Resolve togather in my edits, because they are still some features in premier pro that Davinci Resolve doesn't have and vise versa, so i use a combonation of both for my edits..
/t5/premiere-pro-ideas/dehaze-in-premiere/idc-p/15139788#M19313Feb 07, 2025
Feb 07, 2025
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Let's move this to the Ideas forum. We need to have this function. I think it's possible to build an effects preset to get you on the ballpark. Check out @chrisw44157881's link for possibilities on that. I hope the team can address this shortly. Sorry for the issue.
Thanks, Kevin
Kevin Monahan - Sr. Community & Engagement Strategist – Pro Video and Audio
Edit: I guess that's one way to do it. The Cineon Effect does get me in the zone. The Lumetri Settings didn't work for my image. I just used Auto Color and it had better settings than the recipe.
Kevin
Kevin Monahan - Sr. Community & Engagement Strategist – Pro Video and Audio
/t5/premiere-pro-ideas/dehaze-in-premiere/idc-p/15140946#M19319Feb 08, 2025
Feb 08, 2025
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Yea, there's a couple of the "simple" contrast punching included Lumetri presets that do things slightly differently from each other, and can work as a basis for "dehazing".
One of numerous reasons I wish they had subfolder support for the LUT use in both Technical (Basic tab) and Creative (Creative tab) LUT systems. So you could see them organized by what they do.
/t5/premiere-pro-ideas/dehaze-in-premiere/idc-p/15141181#M19322Feb 08, 2025
Feb 08, 2025
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All Dehazing tool is, is changes in Contrast, Shadows and some Whites and blacks and a bit of other things, that is all that it is.. All the Exposure and color settings in premier pro can do what Dehazing does, you just have to be creative and find out what is needed to make the correct changes.. Now if you don't want to do all that work, you could get the free copy of davinci resolve and put your video in that and use davinci resolve Dehazing tool until your satisfied, and then bring your edited footage back in to Premier pro, that is an option and davinci resolve does have the best Dehazing tool by far. I do most of my exposure and color grading in davinci resolve any way because it's far more superior than Premier pro, i have to admit that, facts are facts..
/t5/premiere-pro-ideas/dehaze-in-premiere/idc-p/15141188#M19323Feb 08, 2025
Feb 08, 2025
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Resolve was built as a $250,000 per seat grading app. Color grading is still the heart and soul of Resolve, so of course it's color is better. There's only a couple apps maybe better, and they're WAY more expensive too.
But as someone who works in Resolve daily, and even does some teaching of it, it isn't near the NLE that Premiere is. And for some things, Avid is still easier to use. They all have differences.
Premiere's color tools can be pushed to do far more than most people, even most colorists, realize. I've had some fun with the colorists I've been close to over the last decade plus, doing things in Premiere that they didn't think possible.
That said, I still am ticked that a previous program manager EOL'd SpeedGrade ... but ah well. Lumetri isn't what SpeedGrade could do. Let alone challenge Resolve for color.
I'd add that often there is a small amount of specific, typically high frequency sharpening in dehaze processes. Past the contrast changes.