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colors of other frames so that the color values of those points remain constant throughout the duration of the layer. This effect is useful for
removing flicker from footage and equalizing the exposure of footage with color shifts caused by varying lighting situations.
Use this effect to remove the flicker common to time-lapse photography and stop-frame animation.
You can animate the effect control points that define the sample areas to track objects for which you want to stabilize colors. The greater the
difference in color values between the sample points, the better the effect works.
This effect works with 8-bpc and 16-bpc color.
Set Frame Sets the pivot frame. Display the frame that has the area of brightness or color that you want to match, and click Set Frame.
Stabilize What to stabilize:
Brightness Brightness is stabilized using one sample point (Black Point).
Levels Color is stabilized using two sample points (Black Point and White Point).
Curves Color is stabilized using all three sample points (Black Point, White Point, and Mid Point).
Black Point Place this point on a dark area to stabilize.
Mid Point Place this point on a midtone area to stabilize.
White Point Place this point on a bright area to stabilize.
Sample Size Radius, in pixels, of sampled areas.
Colorama effect
The Colorama effect is a versatile and powerful effect for converting and animating colors in an image. Using the Colorama effect, you can subtly
tint an image or radically change its color palette.
Colorama works by first converting a specified color attribute to grayscale and then remapping the grayscale values to one or more cycles of the
specified output color palette. One cycle of the output color palette appears on the Output Cycle wheel. Black pixels are mapped to the color at the
top of the wheel; increasingly lighter grays are mapped to successive colors going clockwise around the wheel. For example, with the default Hue
Cycle palette, pixels corresponding to black become red, while pixels corresponding to 50% gray become cyan.
This effect works with 8-bpc and 16-bpc color.
Guy Chen provides an example on the
(in this case for the turbulent surface of the Sun) and then colorizes the noise with the Colorama effect.
Andrew Kramer provides a video tutorial on his
matte as a first step in replacing a sky.
Input Phase controls
Get Phase From The color attribute to use as input. Choose Zero to use a color attribute from another layer.
Add Phase The second layer to use as input. To use only this layer as input, select Zero for Get Phase From; otherwise, both the Add Phase
layer and the layer to which the effect is applied are used. You can choose the layer to which the effect is applied to add a second input attribute
from the same layer.
Add Phase From The color attribute from the second layer to use as input.
Add Mode How input values are combined:
Wrap Adds the values of the two attributes for each pixel. Values above 100% are wrapped around the cycle again. For example, a sum
of 125% wraps around to 25%.
Clamp Adds the values of the two attributes for each pixel. Values above 100% are clipped to 100%.
Average Averages the values of the two attributes for each pixel. Because the average of two values that are each in the range 0% to
100% is never over 100%, wrapping and clamping by this operation are never necessary. Average is therefore the safest option for
predictable output.
Screen Screens the second layer over the original layer; the brighter areas in the second layer brighten the first layer, and the darker
areas in the second layer are discarded. Screen mode is especially useful for compositing fire, lens flares, and other lighting effects.
Phase Shift The point on the Output Cycle wheel at which the mapping of the input colors begins. A positive value moves the starting point
clockwise around the Output Cycle wheel.
Animate Phase Shift to cycle colors around the wheel.
Output Cycle controls
Use Preset Palette Presets for the Output Cycle. The top palettes are designed for quick color correction and adjustment tasks. The bottom
choices offer a variety of built-in color palettes for creative results.
Output Cycle Customize the output color palette by altering the colors and locations of the triangles on the Output Cycle wheel. The triangles
specify the location on the color wheel where a specific color occurs. The color between triangles is smoothly interpolated, unless Interpolate
Palette is deselected. Each Output Cycle can have 1-64 triangles.
To change the location of a triangle, drag the triangle. Shift-drag to snap the triangle to 45-degree increments. At the top of the wheel, the
triangle snaps to either the start position or end position depending on whether you drag from the left or right.
To add a triangle, click in or near the wheel, and select a color from the color picker. Click slightly to the left of the top arrows for the end
After Effects Exchange
on the Adobe website that uses the Fractal Noise effect to generate the base noise
Video Copilot website
that demonstrates the use of the Colorama effect to create a procedural
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