How to Color Correct in After Effects (The RIGHT Way!)

An in-depth tutorial on color correction using Curves inside of After Effects and Photoshop.

This method explains how to color correct most any footage “by the numbers”. It’s a bit of a science that requires only a minimum amount of understanding of RGB values.

Please bestow a ♥ like or leave a ✉ comment if you have questions!

You can skip the introduction if you so choose:
0:45 – Before and After
1:09 – Tutorial Start
12:37 – Edit your color corrected footage in Premiere! (Dynamically Link the CC’ed Footage)

Using Photoshop for color correction is really a lot easier than you may think. In this tutorial, the method is very simple and fast – NO rendering multiple frames, NO importing video files into Photoshop, and easy access to making color changes.

This tutorial is a tad long at 15 minutes – please bear with me as I fully explain the techniques here! :) Hopefully you will find the techniques helpful.

☞ TIPS:

✏ Choose areas that are large enough to sample and don’t contain color casts or Chromatic Aberration
✏ Remember to use common sense. If the colors are just not looking right, either sample a different area or adjust to your liking.
✏ Your footage may have different areas of brightness or color shifts throughout the video. Animate your Levels for differing brightness, and animate your Curves for differing color where needed.
✏ Sometimes having crushed blacks or blown highlights are okay – especially in video. Keep this in mind when working with the Levels effect and don’t worry if you have either of those in your final result.
✏ If you have the opportunity, use a gray card somewhere in the image – so that later in post, you can reference that neutral gray midtone for color correction.
✏ IMPORTANT: If you are using CS5, make sure you are using the Eyedropper Tool, NOT the Color Sampler Tool. Thanks to Ryan Yakich for the heads up.

RGB Color Correction Values Reference (also at 9:54):
Highlights ✏ 245
Midtones ✏ 135
Shadows ✏ no less than 12

Baby Tree Frog

Baby Tree Frog Wallpaper

Baby Tree Frog by Michael DeVowe

This little guy was perched on some flowers close to the house – his body was only ¾” long!

View this little tree frog on Flickr to download the desktop wallpaper.

Concerned for the Future (TV spot)

This 30-second clip is my entry to Parental Rights (parentalrights.org) PROclaim video contest.  I entered “Concerned for the Future” into the Commercials category.

I was able to put a script together, shoot the footage, then produce the video this morning.  Getting the script right was the most challenging because I had just written it and did not have any kind of teleprompter for the footage.  All the dramatic lighting shots (black background) were shot late last night, and the outdoor scenes were around 8am this morning.  It took over 20 minutes of footage just to get the right outdoor scene of me standing in the grass.  This was mainly because I had to a) get my 30-second spiel right and b) battle the commuters going to work and nature’s friendly morning sounds. :)

The part I enjoy most about videography and producing videos is usually how the video communicates.  In all the steps of creating videos, editing is my favorite because it is the most creative part of the process.

Making this TV spot also made me think about my children’s future – “Train up a child in the way he should go: and when he is old, he will not depart from it.” – Proverbs 22:6 I believe that way is through parenthood, not government.

View on Vimeo

The Wissmann Family (Two More Bluegrass Songs)

A quick video I uploaded of the Wissmann’s singing and playing a couple songs, If My Heart Had Wings and His Word Is Faithful.

The sounds guys had some issues at the beginning unfortunately.

View on Vimeo
WissmannFamily.com

The Kingery Family – How Great Thou Art

The Kingery family singing at the Lake Itasca Family Music Festival on August 8th, 2009.  Check out their website for more info and other videos!

TheKingeryFamily.com
View on Vimeo