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Table Of Contents
The Color Correction Monitors
742
In most respects, the monitors in Color Correction mode work like other monitors in your Avid
editing application. For example, operations such as activating monitors, showing and hiding the
video, displaying timecode information, and using the position bar are the same. For more
information, start with “Viewing and Marking Footage” in the Help.
The monitor window in Color Correction mode displays wide-screen 16:9 video as well as
standard format 4:3 video in the monitors, depending on your project’s aspect ratio setting. For
more information, see “Changing the Aspect Ratio for an SD Project” in the Help.
You can customize image display in each of the three monitors by selecting from the monitor’s
Source menu. For more information, see “Customizing Image Display in Color Correction
Monitors” on page 742.
Customizing Image Display in Color Correction Monitors
You can customize the type of image that displays in each monitor in Color Correction mode.
For example, you can display segments other than the default previous, current, and next
segments, or you can display the entire sequence in one monitor. You can also replace video
image display with a waveform or vectorscope display to help you analyze images as you
correct.
To configure the display in a monitor:
t Click the monitor’s Source menu, and select one of the commands described in “Source
Menu Commands in Color Correction Monitors” on page 742.
Source Menu Commands in Color Correction Monitors
Command Description
Empty Displays no image (black).
Entire Sequence Makes the entire sequence available in the monitor. This is useful when you want to
compare shots from many different places in a sequence. For example, you can
display the current segment and the next segment in two monitors for immediate
shot-to-shot comparison and display the entire sequence in the third monitor so that
you can quickly navigate to any other part of the sequence you want to view. When
you change the current segment, the entire sequence updates to that segment.
n
You can use the Play Loop button in the Command palette to play the whole
sequence in the active monitor even if the monitor is not set to Entire
Sequence. For more information, see “Using the Play Loop Button in Color
Correction Mode” on page 745.