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FCP7 change background colorPosted by music858video
sure you can use the color corrector for this.
there are simple match-hue tools (an eye-dropper, white square, and white dot) but for completely changing one colour into another, you might need something a bit more powerful. basically you define a colour area using the "limit colour" controls, then adjust it to match the other colour. the simple color corrector is better for this, as it has the Hue wheel in more recent OSs, the color picker tool is a bit broken in FCP7 so you need to do more manual work to get it right apply the color corrector, open the clip in the viewer, go to the CC tab at the bottom of the Colour Corrector, toggle open the "Limit Colour" section. using the eye dropper, click on the wall colour in your clip. under the eye dropper, there's a key icon, click on that to see how effective the key is, (image will go pure black/white) and then use the colour. saturation and luminance controls to adjust / refine it. when you've got just the wall selected click the key button TWICE to get back to normal view, and adjust the hue. luma and saturation to change the colour of the wall. OR, use the match hue controls. with these you use the match hue eye-droper to select a colour you wan tot match TO (in the other clip) in the collar corrector, the tiny eye-dropper under the Balance wheel will turn green, use that to select the colour you want to match in this clip. matching grey to green or vice-versa it may be simple enough to do it manually. cheers, nick
Yes, I want to completely change one color into another. Perhaps the clips could be adjusted in another program, then exported and (sad part) reconverted for use.
It sounds like what you described is not powerful enough to affect the single range of color and not the entire frame (subject included). I want the subject isolated, background only affected.
maybe my first sentence was confusing,
the "Match Hue" controls probably won't do the job, but the "Limit Colour" controls (what i describe in detail) should do what you want "I want the subject isolated, background only affected." that's what it does, by targeting only the colour of the bg. if that colour happens to be in the fg subject, then you might be in trouble, but in that case the limit colour controls coupled with a garbage matte will generally see you though. nick
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