Color Balance (Rgb) Effect; Color Match Effect; Color Offset Effect; Color Pass Effect - Adobe PREMIERE PRO 2 Manual

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The Color Balance (HLS) effect has the following settings:
Specifies the color scheme of the image.
Hue
Specifies the brightness of the image.
Lightness
Adjusts the image's color saturation. The default value is 0 which doesn't affect the colors. Negative values
Saturation
decrease saturation, with -100 converting the clip to grayscale. Values greater than 0 produce more saturated colors.

Color Balance (RGB) effect

The Color Balance effect changes colors in the clip by adjusting the RGB levels. Drag the Red, Green, and Blue sliders
to adjust the level of each color.

Color Match effect

The Color Match effect allows you to match the colors from one source clip to another by adjusting hue, saturation,
and luminance. Sample eyedroppers sample shadows, midtones, and highlights from the sample or color you are
trying to match. Target eyedroppers sample shadows, midtones, and highlights of the clip you are trying to adjust.
The Color Match effect has the following setting:
Specifies the method by which colors are adjusted including HSL, RGB, or Curves.
Method
See also
"To match the color between two scenes" on page 273

Color Offset effect

The Color Offset effect shifts the pixels of the red, green, and blue channels in a specified direction and amount. Use
this effect to create a three-dimensional clip for viewing with special glasses (one red lens and one blue lens) or to
create colored ghosting effects.
To produce the appearance of the image dropping back, shift the Red channel to the left a small amount. To bring the
image forward, shift the Red channel to the right a small amount.

Color Pass effect

The Color Pass effect converts a clip to grayscale, with the exception of a single specified color. Use the Color Pass
effect to highlight a particular area of a clip. For example, in a clip of a basketball game, you could highlight the
basketball by selecting and preserving its color, while keeping the rest of the clip displayed in grayscale. Note,
however, that with the Color Pass effect, you can isolate only colors, not objects within the clip.
See also
"To isolate a single color using Color Pass" on page 276
Color Replace effect
The Color Replace effect replaces all occurrences of a selected color with a new color, preserving any gray levels.
Using this effect, you could change the color of an object in an image by selecting it and then adjusting the controls
to create a different color.
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