I have to agree with vindibona.... DaVinci Resolve is free for most and is very powerful. It will save you a fortune over time.Good footage. Needs a bunch of color grading which I'm sure you can do in PP.
Just for giggles, download Davinci Resolve before you get too ingrained with PP. Same learning curve but with different protocols, and a helluva lot cheaper (free). Adobe is going to ding your pocket book every month whether you use it or not. The full featured "regular" version of Davinci Resolve is free- forever... a no brainer in my book.
Yeah... not many of us can boast getting Adobe for free.... I pay for Lightroom and Photoshop $10 a month but to get Premier Pro it would cost about $50 a month because they won't offer it as a low cost standalone.Through my work I receive the full Adobe Creative cloud free (Just about everything Adobe has to offer) when they stop offering Adobe FREE ill switch back to DaVinci Resolve because FREE is for ME! LOL
I used DaVinci Resolve for a little bit and Struggled through it every time.
I just picked up PP and it seemed a little easier to use.
As for Color grading I'm color blind, so if I actually grade it to my liking it looks like crap. I just have to keep practicing at what looks normal. and work at it more.
Thanks for all the feed back!
Exactly. The first clip is just the raw untouched D-Log footage. The rest have different LUTs and additional adjustments with looks like 'video', docu, film, etc. and mood-setting music - all from a single take.LenSavage: That was quite a neat demonstration of post production! I assume that the the first clip was unedited out of the camera and then each subsequent clip was edited in a different manner? It also illustrates how the music choices envoke different emotional responses to the same video material (albeit handled differently in post). Clever boy!
Very interesting and yes I can see where the skyline would be more impressive on a big screen. Great work!Exactly. The first clip is just the raw untouched D-Log footage. The rest have different LUTs and additional adjustments with looks like 'video', docu, film, etc. and mood-setting music - all from a single take.
BTW: On the 'big-screen', the San Diego city skyline in the far-right would be more prominent.
Thank you for your reply, I have used Davinci Resolve and seemed to fight with it.. with that said i figured id try Adobe Premiere Pro since I don't have to pay for it.If you are set on using Premiere Pro, here's a good resource: Larry Jordan
Larry Jordan is a long-time educator and provides a lot of free tutorials and webinars. Costs nothing to get on his mailing list.
That said, I went to Davinci Resolve this year and don't regret it.
Learn to use the scopes. Think of it as IFR for color grading.Through my work I receive the full Adobe Creative cloud free (Just about everything Adobe has to offer) when they stop offering Adobe FREE ill switch back to DaVinci Resolve because FREE is for ME! LOL
I used DaVinci Resolve for a little bit and Struggled through it every time.
I just picked up PP and it seemed a little easier to use.
As for Color grading I'm color blind, so if I actually grade it to my liking it looks like crap. I just have to keep practicing at what looks normal. and work at it more.
Thanks for all the feed back!
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