So after exporting, depending on what OS, monitor, browser or player is in use, that image will vary from what was seen inside Premiere. If your system like mine has been calibrated/profiled through the entire setup correctly, it's not useful.īut Premiere can not over-ride the system outside of it's own playback. It does a fairly decent job.Īnd all Mac users and most PC folk should use that Display Color Management option. Within Premiere, they added the "Display color managment" option, which tells Premiere to look at the ICC profile of a monitor, and attempt to remap the image to correct Rec709 within that monitor's working setup. as the ColorSync utility on Macs only applies the scene transform function, it does not apply the expected and required other half, the display transform function, So on Macs, the display of much Rec709 is performed using incorrect gamma. Which requires some work on a PC, and is very difficult with a Mac.
That, as all pro colorists will use it, is the correct way.Īnd solve your system's color management. Set the Nvidia card back to video (which it thinks of as Rec709) back to limited/16-235. He does't actuallly understand color management at all.
And any true full media you've got is unusably mangled. Why? "Full" and "limiited" have absolutely nothing whatever to do with the display of the media, but with the encoding expectation of the playback system! Set that Nvidia card as that dude wrongly says to do, you will crush the blacks in all Rec709 media that is properly encoded. both 'full' DPX clip and 'limited' Rec.709 will display on the monitor from 0-255. Premiere will treat them as full.ĭoes this mean your monitor then displays them wrong? NO!Īs long as your monitor is set correctly, while in Premiere. Because that is correct.Ī few format/codecs are full, nearly all of them 12-bit image sequences like DPX.
Nearly all Rec.709 media is limited, and Premiere will treat that as limited. never has been! Premiere was designed to be used on pro broadcast standards system, with PRO media standards. Premiere is NOT at all "full" OR "limited". Do NOT listed to every dude on YouTube, that guy is just wrong.