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Image control effects, Black & white effect, Color balance (rgb) effect – Adobe Premiere Pro CS3 User Manual

Page 340: Color match effect (windows only), Color pass effect (windows only)

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ADOBE PREMIERE PRO CS3

User Guide

334

Paint Time Properties and Brush Time Properties

Specifies whether paint properties and brush properties are

applied to each brush mark or to the entire stroke. Choose None to apply values at each time to all brush marks in
the stroke. Choose a property name for each brush mark to retain the value for that property at the time that the
brush mark was drawn. For example, if you choose Color, then each brush mark keeps the color specified by the
Color value at the time that the mark was drawn.

Paint Style

How the paint stroke interacts with the original image:

On Original Image

Paint stroke appears over original image.

On Transparent

Paint stroke appears over transparency; the original image doesn’t appear.

Reveal Original Image

The original image is revealed by the paint stroke.

See also

About keyframes

” on page 282

Image Control effects

Black & White effect

The Black & White effect converts any color clip to grayscale; that is, colors appear as shades of gray. You cannot
animate this effect with keyframes.

Color Balance (RGB) effect

The Color Balance (RGB) effect changes the amount of red, green, and blue in a clip.

Color Match effect (Windows only)

The Color Match effect allows you to match the colors from one source clip to another by adjusting hue, saturation,
and luminance. Sample eyedroppers sample shadows, midtones, and highlights from the sample or color you are
trying to match. Target eyedroppers sample shadows, midtones, and highlights of the clip you are trying to adjust.

Method

Specifies the method by which colors are adjusted including HSL, RGB, or Curves.

See also

Match the color between two scenes

” on page 272

Color Pass effect (Windows only)

The Color Pass effect converts a clip to grayscale, with the exception of a single specified color. Use the Color Pass
effect to highlight a particular area of a clip. For example, in a clip of a basketball game, you could highlight the
basketball by selecting and preserving its color, while keeping the rest of the clip displayed in grayscale. Note,
however, that with the Color Pass effect, you can isolate only colors, not objects within the clip.

See also

Isolate a single color using Color Pass

” on page 275

April 1, 2008