April 15th, 2015, 02:28 PM | #16 | |
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Location: Mountains of North Carolina
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Quote:
Years ago I got an SE version of Pinnacle (that came with a scanner I bought) that had a color correction feature. As I recall, it would have you ID an area of the frame that was supposed to be pure white and then measure the "amount of correction" need to turn it white and then apply that amount to all the other pixels in each frame throughout the video. Pretty clever, but too simple an approach for most color problems, particularly this one. I tried separating the video into segments. Ones that were green tinted and ones that were not. The color correction wasn't too bad, but after all that I couldn't "stitch" the segments back together. Talk about irritating. I had hoped that by now there were more sophisticated software, like the stuff you see on TV when they enhance a video of a license plate so it can be read. I think the human eye and brain do some color correction when viewing "The Seduction of Lyn Carter" or it might be that the eye and brain are "focused" on more interesting things in the frame rather than that green tinting. |
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