Creative Communities of the World Forums

The peer to peer support community for media production professionals.

Activity Forums Adobe Premiere Pro How to eliminate flicker / bluish glow

  • How to eliminate flicker / bluish glow

    Posted by Omar Ayoub on April 24, 2013 at 7:55 pm

    Flicker: After I imported my Canon XF105 .MXF video files into PPro CS6, I noticed there was a slow-moving flicker from bottom to top (sort of like the flicker you get sometimes when you film a computer screen). It is barely noticeable, but it is there. My file is Upper Field First interlaced, but I am editing in 720p in case it is relevant. Can I eliminate or at least reduce that?

    Glow: Since I used a strong backlight on my subject, his white hat is almost overexposed and has a bluish outline. Is there anyway to eliminate / color-correct / reduce that in PPro?

    Omar Ayoub replied 13 years ago 2 Members · 4 Replies
  • 4 Replies
  • Chris Tompkins

    April 24, 2013 at 8:01 pm

    720p is progressive for one thing, how is it that you are working in a Interlaced sequence? Are you combining formats?

    Have you viewed your video on a external video monitor? You can’t judge it on a computer screen.

    Chris

  • Omar Ayoub

    April 24, 2013 at 8:23 pm

    Hello Chris, and thanks for replying.

    Ok, here’s my case: When I import my .MXF clips to a matching sequence, the sequence setting shows a 1920×1080 and “Upper Field First” under settings, which means it is interlaced, not progressive (as far as I could gather).

    The point at which my life becomes complicated is when I need to scale (enlarge) some of the scenes from my clips. If I do that in 1920×1080, I lose quality because I’m enlarging it more than 100%. The only reason I want to go for 720p is because it allows me to enlarge some of the frames without losing a lot of resolution. According to some of the expert advice here, I should stick to interlaced, not jump to progressive, since it matches my clip settings.. So 720p is a bad idea. But how can I enlarge some scenes without losing quality in an interlaced 1920×1080?

  • Chris Tompkins

    April 24, 2013 at 8:50 pm

    What you are doing is not UN-common, we often shoot 1080 and edit in a 720 sequence. This allows room to move, cut in, etc. Works great.

    But, you need to shoot progressive in 1080, like 1080/30p or 1080/24p
    and then edit in 720/30p or 720/24p.

    So why not res up the problem shots a couple of pixels and eliminate the issue?

    Chris

  • Omar Ayoub

    April 24, 2013 at 9:18 pm

    I hear you. I should shoot in 1080p next time. Anyway, the reason I can’t work in 1080i now is because I am scaling some frames up to 125%, or even 150% in some instances. If I do that in 1080i, the scene becomes pixelated, which is why I chose to work with 720p. I didn’t notice any interlacing though, which is weird. Shouldn’t importing a 1080i video into a 720p create that problem?

    All this aside though, I noticed that the aforementioned flickering is present even in the 1080i sequence, which is also weird. I’m guessing it is because of the strong fluorescent back light (maybe it’s a frequency thing). I tried all sorts of things like trying different things with the field options, to no avail.

    By the way, did you ask about whether I checked the scene on an external video monitor in order to see whether the flickering was present, or whether the bluish glow was still showing?

We use anonymous cookies to give you the best experience we can.
Our Privacy policy | GDPR Policy