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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
256 Chapter 11 Color FX
Scale RGB
Expands or contracts the overall contrast ratio of a shot, from the black point to the
white point, centering the midpoint of this operation at a percentage of image tonality
that you specify. This node has two parameters:
 Scale: The amount by which to expand or contract the overall contrast ratio in the
shot. This is a multiplicative operation, so a value of 1 produces no change, while
larger values increase the contrast ratio, and smaller values decrease the contrast
ratio.
 Center: Specifies the percentage of image tonality upon which the expansion and
contraction is centered, so the original image values at this percentage remain at
that percentage. The default value of 0.5 adjusts the white and black points equally
in both directions (the white point goes up, the black point goes down, and
whatever values are at 50 percent remain at 50 percent). A value of 0 pins the black
point while applying the entire adjustment to the white point, and a value of 1 pins
the white point while applying the entire adjustment to the black point.
Sharpen
Applies a sharpen convolution filter that selectively enhances contrast in areas of image
detail to provide the illusion of sharpness. Should be used sparingly as this operation
also increases the sharpness of film grain and video noise. This node has one
parameter:
 Sharpen: Higher values increase image detail contrast. A value of 0 does no
sharpening.
Smooth Step
Applies a nonadjustable “s-curve” adjustment to slightly crush the blacks and boost the
whites, leaving the black and white points pinned at 0 and 100 percent. Designed to
emulate the exposure tendencies of film at the “toe” and “shoulder” of the image. This is
a similar contrast adjustment to that made by the Film Look node.
Stretch
Provides separate vertical and horizontal scaling operations that let you “squeeze” and
“stretch” the image. You can change the center pixel at which this scaling is performed.
This node has four parameters:
 Horizontal Center: The pixel at which horizontal scaling is centered. The center pixel
doesn’t move; instead, the scaling of the image is relative to this position.
 Vertical Center: The pixel at which vertical scaling is centered. The center pixel doesn’t
move; instead, the scaling of the image is relative to this position.










