Wednesday 6 November 2013

P1. Adobe Premiere Pro




Adobe Premiere Pro


In Adobe Premiere Pro when you want to adjust the saturation or brightness of a clip you can use the Vector scope. This tool allows you to see the chrominance levels of your film. The saturation of your clip is measured from the centre of the circle outward. If you want a black and white image to be produced, the wheel will only have a dot in the centre of the circle, where as if the colour is away from the centre, the further it is the more vibrant the colours are. If you want a particular colour or hue for your film clip, you can adjust the direction/angle of the pattern.


 The YC waveform is a graph displaying signal intensity in the film. The vertical axis is the signal intensity in units and the horizontal axis is the video image. With the YC wave form you can adjust the brightness of the clip and displays both chrominance and luminance. The luminance information appears as a green wave form and the brighter something is the brighter/stronger the green wave forms are. These brighter wave forms appear close to the top, where as darker wave forms appear near the bottom.

RGB Parade is a graph which also display wave forms, but specific waveforms representing the colours red, blue and green, which are the channels. The purpose of this graph is so you can see the colours that are showing most in your clip, and helps you to change and play around with them. The levels of the colours are measured proportionately to each other from a scale of 0 to 100.





In Adobe Premiere Pro, we experimented with editing a clip, by using Jarle's Pre-sets, the three images here are examples of some of the pre-sets that where available to use. The first one is Summer Sepia, the second is Bleach and the third is Bypass 1. 




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