Streaming Media

Streaming Media on Facebook Streaming Media on Twitter Streaming Media on LinkedIn
 

Tutorial: Applying Looks and Matching Shots in Adobe CC

Recent upgrades to Adobe CC make it easy to apply graded looks in Adobe Premiere Pro CC and match shots with different color temperatures via seamless roundtripping between Premiere Pro CC and SpeedGrade CC.

Back in May, Adobe added Lumetri Looks to Premiere Pro CC. Just recently, they released another update to the Creative Cloud Suite, and this one provided a streamlined workflow between Premiere Pro and SpeedGrade, the color grading application acquired from Iridas, which until this upgrade had not enjoyed roundtrip functionality with Premiere Pro via a direct link with the application.

For those that aren’t comfortable with color grading by the traditional means, Lumetri Looks and SpeedGrade make it very simple to do some pretty neat color adjustments without a lot of training or a lot of time invested.

Using Lumetri Presets in Premiere Pro

The simplest way to get started with these tools is to use a Lumetri preset in Premiere Pro and you haven’t before. If you’ve applied and customized effects in Premiere Pro before, this should look very familiar.

To begin, add a clip that you want to color-grade to the timeline, then go to the Project panel and select the Effects tab. There you’ll find the Lumetri Look. Click the disclosure triangle and you’ll see four different categories: Cinematic, Desaturation, Style and Temperature. When you select any of these folders, Premiere Pro will show you a quick preview of what some of the effects in the folder look like (Figure 1, below).

Figure 1. The 4 categories of Lumetri Looks in the Premiere Pro CC Effects panel, with a preview of two looks in the Style folder.

For this example we’ll work with a Bleach Bypass look found in the Cinematic folder. Bleach Bypass looks, found in many color grading plug-ins and effects collections, is always a popular look with cinematic projects. Just as with any other effect, we simply drag it over to a clip to apply it, as shown in Figure 2 (below), and the look of the clip changes instantly.

Figure 2. A Bleach Bypass look clicked, dragged, and applied. Click the image to see it at full size.

Ads you can see from the red line above the graded clip, the clip needs to be rendered. But if you do play it, you can see pretty well in real-time what it’ll look like. And, as with any other effect, you can always A-B it by turning the Effect on and off in the Effect Controls so you can compare the look of the clip before and after.

Related Articles
Clear Online Video's Stjepan Alaupovic demos the new shot matching tools in Adobe Premiere Pro's Color panel.
This tutorial demonstrates how to use an After Effects alpha matte to make your video "shine through" your text.
Today Adobe announced updates to all Creative Cloud video apps that will debut at NAB. Here are details on the updates, plus a video tutorial on four key new features in Premiere Pro CC: Master Clips, Live Text, Masking and Tracking, and new 4K format support.
While After Effects may be daunting for some Premiere Pro editors, here is an easy-to-follow workflow that can enliven your text and titles with pre-built animations found in Adobe Bridge, applied in a few simple steps in After Effects, and imported directly into your Premiere Pro timeline.
iShowU, a Mac-based screencam app from ShinyWhiteBox.com, is quick, easy-to-use, and inexpensive; here's a look at how to use it to produce pro screencams that you can import into Adobe Premiere Pro CC to integrate into your video projects.
In this tutorial, we'll look at how to create screencams with TechSmith Camtasia, and then import them into Adobe Premiere Pro to incorporate them into your existing Premiere Pro projects to create professional-quality instructional videos that seamlessly combine screencams and HD footage.
Here are three quick tips that will streamline your titling workflow in Premiere Pro when you create styles you like and want to use them consistently without reinventing them each time.
This video tutorial demonstrates how to restore muffled sections of spoken audio using the Multiband Compressor in Adobe Premiere Pro CC or Adobe Audition.
This video tutorial demonstrates how to use and leverage 3 key new features in Adobe Media Encoder CC: Lumetri Looks support, and image, text, and timecode overlay.
This tutorial demonstrates how to apply an effect to a portion of a video image while leaving the rest of the clip untouched, and how to track that portion of the image throughout the duration of the clip, using the Track Matte effect in Adobe Premiere Pro CC.
New SpeedLooks in SpeedGrade, Mask Tracker in After Effects, Sync Settings in Adobe Media Encoder, improved multicam in Premiere Pro, expanded UltraHD/4k support, and more
Using Adobe Lightroom 5 to color-grade and apply metadata to DSLR video files is simple and efficient and can benefit live-switchers doing minimal edits, editing novices, and pro editors exploring non-traditional workflows.
In this final round between audio editing champs iZotope RX 3 and Adobe Audition CC, we compare the two audio editors in noise reduction and reverb/echo reduction.
In this first installment of a two-part series, Jan Ozer compares the declipping and crackle and pop-removal features in iZotope's new RX 3 pro audio editor to the parallel features in Adobe Audition CC.
Exploring 3 new key features in Audition CC, the newest version of Adobe's professional audio editing application: Sound Removal for eliminating hums and other variable-frequency unwanted noises, the Loudness Radar Meter for matching and adhering to broadcast volume standards, and Automatic Speech Alignment for ADR.
If you ever find yourself having to render multiple sequences from Premiere Pro, there's an easier way to do it than by using the Premiere Pro Export control. This tutorial will explain the easier and more efficient way using Adobe Media Encoder.
Here's a quick tutorial for Premiere Pro CC users on how to migrate encoding presets that you created to customize and streamline encodes in Adobe Media Encoder CS5/6 into Adobe Media Encoder CC so you can pick up right where you left off.
In this tutorial you'll learn how to create and edit industry-standard closed captions for video using the new closed-captioning capabilities in the just-released Adobe Premiere Pro CC.
Two types of noises degrade the audio you shoot with your video: random noises like microphone clicks and pops, and consistent noises like white noise or air conditioning hum. This tutorial demonstrates how to remove both of them in Adobe Audition CS6.