I wanted to like Sony Vegas, but rendering time is outrageous, and the program is unstable. I just find Premiere to be the fastest editor with the best user interface. Avid Media Composer has its perks, but nothing that PPro can’t do. I have used every video editing suite out there, and always end up going back to Premiere Pro CS5. I have been looking for a way to do “selective” saturation and an effective method for fixing blown-out blue skies in Premiere. These tools will make sure you finish before deadline, and they work in both CS5 and CS5.5. Please download the free preset collection “Jarle’s Grading Tools” so you can start doing professional color grading in Premiere Pro without wasting your time on unnecessary tweaking. The source file is 1636 x 920 pixels, so feel free to go to Vimeo and when possible if you want better quality. You’re supposed to know how to add effects, tweak settings and how to operate Premiere Pro in general. Not for beginners This tutorial is not meant for beginners. You’ll learn how to fix these, of course. Still, it’s shot with a camera and the video is 8-bit 4:2:0 MPEG-2, so we’ve got some artifacts to deal with. No “we-recorded-this-for-the-tutorial” stuff. Real life material All the footage is real life recordings from my own films. Save your preferences to use on other shots in your video. Choose from a range of preset settings or manually adjust levels. Open your project in Premiere Pro and select Color in the workspace toolbar to open the Lumetri Color panel.
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