![using adobe premiere with google earth using adobe premiere with google earth](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/X-xjNUt0S3M/maxresdefault.jpg)
Gamma 2.4 displays with higher contrast - blacker blacks and whiter whites. Premiere displays video based on the assumption that your monitor is set to Rec709 color space and that your footage was recorded in reference to gamma 2.4, because that's the gamma standard for broadcast television. (Screenshots from Boots Riley's "Sorry to Bother You")Ī. (Screenshots provided from this forum post) Side by side, you can see that video in Premiere (left) is displayed with more saturation than the video displayed in QuickTime (right). If you're experiencing this behavior and you're on a Windows machine, please send me a private message! As far as we know, this is a Mac-only issue. When played back on YouTube through those web browsers, the video also appears less saturated than it does in Premiere. When importing footage into Premiere Pro, the display of the video looks more saturated than when it is played back on other apps such as VLC, QuickTime, After Effects, or a number of web browsers like Safari or Google Chrome.
Using adobe premiere with google earth pro#
Help!! Premiere Pro CC is changing the color of my imported footage Footage appears darker after imported into Premiere Proĭ. "When I post my video on YouTube it looks less saturated and the blacks are raised"Ĭ. "My exports look washed out when I view them in QuickTime player"ī.
![using adobe premiere with google earth using adobe premiere with google earth](https://cdn.tgdd.vn//GameApp/-1//Khu-tap-am-bang-Audio-Track-Mixer-trong-Adobe-Premiere-4-800x450.jpg)
Watch here for a visualization of the solution, and read on to understand why the color shift is happening in the first place.Ī. Courageous community member Matt Johnson made a video based on this document.