Colour grading is an important art, and if you use the Adobe Premiere, then you should get up to speed with SpeedGrade. This fantastic application integrates with Adobe Premiere, and it will give you greater control over your video content. This excellent Adobe SpeedGrade CC course will teach you that Colour Grading is not just about correcting problems but about shaping the emotional impact of your work in such a way as to enhance your audience’s experience and engagement as they watch your productions. In addition, during this SpeedGrade course you will learn the power of this somewhat neglected application in the Adobe CC suite which will put into your hands a great deal of power and control over your video content such that you can quickly and efficiently manipulate the content of your timeline to control and direct the impact of and engagement with your work.
Our learning material is available to students 24/7 anywhere in the world, so it’s extremely convenient. These intensive online courses are open to everyone, as long as you have an interest in the topic! We provide world-class learning led by IAP, so you can be assured that the material is high quality, accurate and up-to-date.
Those who successfully pass this course will be awarded a Adobe SpeedGrade CC certificate. Anyone eligible for certification will receive a free e-certificate, and printed certificate.
This excellent Adobe SpeedGrade CC course will qualify you to be a Video Editor. As a Video Editor you could work for an existing organisation, or could work on a freelance basis. The average salary of a Video Editor in the UK is £23,511, and this will go up with experience (payscale.com). With this course you could fulfil any of the following roles:
1: Introduction & Recent Improvements | |||
1. Premiere Pro to SpeedGrade CC Direct-Link | |||
2. CinemaDNG in Premiere Pro CC & SpeedGrade CC | |||
3. File Formats & Using Prelude for Ingest | |||
4. The User Interface & Keyboard Shortcuts | |||
2: Setting Up For Grading | |||
1. The Importance of the Grading Environment | |||
2. Broadcast Monitors – Do I Need One? | |||
3. Control Surfaces – Do I Need One? (Introduction to Tangent Elements Panels) | |||
3: Getting Started | |||
1. Media Tab & Media Layers | |||
2. The Timeline & Clip Tabs & Working with Multiple Playheads | |||
4: Importing Edited Sequences | |||
1. Importing Sequences | |||
2. Automatic Scene Detection | |||
5: Basic Color Correction | |||
1. Playback & Pause Resolutions | |||
2. The Analysis Tools – Scopes | |||
3. Getting Started in the Look Tab | |||
4. Color Wheels Controls – Offset, Gamma, Gain | |||
5. Alternatives to Using the Color Wheels | |||
6. Selecting Specific Ranges | |||
6: Matching/copying Grades | |||
1. Tools for Shot Matching | |||
2. Grading Layers – Direct, Extracted & New | |||
3. Applying Grades from Other Shots | |||
4. Snapshot Browser | |||
7: Secondary Adjustments | |||
1. Making the Selection | |||
2. An Example | |||
8: Grading Layer Options | |||
1. Layer Effects | |||
2. Creating Custom .Look Files to Apply Directly in Premiere Pro | |||
9: The Power Of Masks | |||
1. Creating Your Masks | |||
2. Tracking Objects & Keyframing Masks | |||
3. Using Masks Creatively | |||
10: Additional Tools | |||
1. Stereoscopic 3D | |||
2. Keyframing Grades | |||
3. Pan & Scan Layers | |||
4. Annotations | |||
11: Rendering | |||
1. The Render Tab | |||
2. Rendering Rushes & Exporting Clips as Individual Files from Your Timeline | |||
12: Tangent Element & Speedgrade Workflow | |||
1. Bt & Kb Panels 1 – Look | |||
2. Bt & Kb Panels 2 – Mask | |||
3. Bt & Kb Panels 3 – Stereo 3D | |||
4. Tk Panel – Grading, Masks and Pan & Scan | |||
5. Mf Panel – Timeline, Grade Ranges & Keyframes | |||
6. Mf Panel – Audio Layers (no panel use) and Pan & Scan Layers |