1.0
Table Of Contents
- Color User Manual
- Contents
- Color Documentation and Resources
- Color Correction Basics
- Color Correction Workflows
- Using the Color Interface
- Importing and Managing Projects and Media
- Creating and Opening Projects
- Saving Projects and Archives
- Moving Projects Between FinalCutPro and Color
- Reconforming Projects
- Importing EDLs
- Exporting EDLs
- Relinking QuickTime Media
- Importing Media Directly into The Timeline
- Compatible Media Formats
- Converting Cineon and DPX Image Sequences to QuickTime
- Importing Color Corrections
- Exporting JPEG Images
- Setup
- Monitoring
- Timeline Playback, Navigation, and Editing
- Video Scopes
- Primary In
- Secondaries
- Color FX
- Primary Out
- Managing Corrections and Grades
- The Difference Between Corrections and Grades
- Saving and Using Corrections and Grades
- Applying Saved Corrections and Grades to Shots
- Managing Grades in the Timeline
- Using the “Copy to” Buttons in the Primary Rooms
- Using the Copy Grade and Paste Grade Memory Banks
- Setting a Beauty Grade in the Timeline
- Disabling All Grades
- Managing Grades in the Shots Browser
- Using the Primary, Secondary, and Color FX Rooms Together to Manage Each Shot’s Corrections
- Keyframing
- Geometry
- Still Store
- Render Queue
- Calibrating Your Monitor
- Keyboard Shortcuts
- Setting Up a Control Surface
- Index
Chapter 8 Video Scopes 153
The Vectorscope is useful for seeing, at a glance, the hue and intensity of the various
colors in your image. Once you learn to identify the colors in your shots on the graph in
the Vectorscope, you will be better able to match two images closely because you can
see where they vary. For example, if one image is more saturated than another, it’s
graph in the Vectorscope will be larger.
You can also use the Vectorscope to spot whether there’s a color cast affecting portions
of the picture that should be neutral (or desaturated). Since desaturated areas of the
picture should be perfectly centered, an off-center Vectorscope graph representing an
image with portions of white, gray, or black clearly indicates a color imbalance.
The Color Targets
The color targets of the Vectorscope scale match the colors in the Color Balance
controls of the Final Cut Pro color correction filters. If the hues of two shots you’re
trying to match don’t match, the direction and distance of their offset on the
Vectorscope scale give you an indication of which direction to move the balance
control indicator to correct for this.
A less saturated image
A more saturated image










