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Activity Forums Adobe After Effects Exporting H264 – gamma shift??

  • Exporting H264 – gamma shift??

    Posted by Alexander Pedersen on August 15, 2014 at 4:54 pm

    You’ve probably heard this problem before but it is driving me INSANE and I simply can’t find any solution to this problem whatsoever! Even worse I’ve run into this issue before but I somehow fixed it – maybe the underlying problem was another. But let’s get to it.

    My problem is when I export my final video for YouTube upload I view my video in VLC and see my darks are lifted and my highligths are lowered – it becomes very flat. The problem is to me without a doubt something with the full range/broadcast or RGB/709. I’m still a little confused about it all. First of all, this is my workflow:

    Record video 1080p with 5D mkII.
    Bring natively into Premiere to edit -> Export as DNxHD, RGB
    Import to DaVinci Resolve for color grade -> Export as DNxHD, full range (this is the ‘RGB’ as it is chosen in PP/AE, right?)

    I first exported from DaVinci with “auto” levels and I guess it chose “normally scaled legal video” as I got my first contrast problem here. It was flat compared to what I saw in DaVinci. Okay, I then exported DNxHD but with “full range” and in VLC I now saw it as it was in DaVinci. All good!

    I then imported this to After Effects where I did some warp stabilizer and sharpening and here comes the problem. I saw it in AE as it was graded in DaVinci but when I export the problem occurs once again. If I export to H264 in both render queue and Media Encoder I get the flat image. If I export to DNxHD RGB i get flat as well, but with DNxHD 709 it is correct. I know VLC might be bad at showing true colors or something, but what I see is what I get when uploaded to YouTube for all three exports and that is my end goal after all.

    EVEN STRANGER: When I import both the 709 and RGB exports they show exactly the same in PP/AE even though VLC and YouTube will show these completely different.

    Is my AE/PP setup uncorrectly? Did I miss a way to choose to export H264 in either full range/broadcast? Is there something wrong in my workflow with the selection of 709/RGB that somewhere along the road ‘destroys’ my files?

    IT IS DRIVING ME CRAZY. Especially because I need to send it for an application tomorrow!

    I really hope you can understand my problem and hopefully help me.

    Thanks in advance.

    ———–
    Messing around in After Effects and Premiere Pro

    Specs for whenever I forget to include it in my oh so many forum questions:

    Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit
    CPU: Intel i7-4770K @ 3,5GHz
    RAM: 16 GB G.Skill 2133MHz
    GPU: GeForce GTX 760
    Motherboard: ASUS Z87-Pro
    Seagate 1 TB

    Ivan Myles replied 11 years, 8 months ago 3 Members · 7 Replies
  • 7 Replies
  • Alexander Pedersen

    August 15, 2014 at 5:09 pm

    And here is what I mean in pictures:

    ———–
    Messing around in After Effects and Premiere Pro

    Specs for whenever I forget to include it in my oh so many forum questions:

    Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit
    CPU: Intel i7-4770K @ 3,5GHz
    RAM: 16 GB G.Skill 2133MHz
    GPU: GeForce GTX 760
    Motherboard: ASUS Z87-Pro
    Seagate 1 TB

  • Alexander Pedersen

    August 15, 2014 at 5:28 pm

    Hey Dave

    Thanks for the quick answer.
    I did that, same old thing. I choose the preset under YouTube: YouTube HD 1080p 23.976 8 Mbps and I get the same flat image in VLC and I just uploaded to YouTube – still flat.

    Again the weird thing is when I import this very file I just created back into AE it shows correct once again….?? I’m thinking it might be how AE/PP shows my files? That it shows this flat image as not flat but in reality it is..?

    ———–
    Messing around in After Effects and Premiere Pro

    Specs for whenever I forget to include it in my oh so many forum questions:

    Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit
    CPU: Intel i7-4770K @ 3,5GHz
    RAM: 16 GB G.Skill 2133MHz
    GPU: GeForce GTX 760
    Motherboard: ASUS Z87-Pro
    Seagate 1 TB

  • Alexander Pedersen

    August 15, 2014 at 7:25 pm

    Okay, so it’s gotta be something with my export settings or settings in After Effects, not my footage. Cause I just did a test with a whole new project and comp with a simple red background and a black solid. Exported with the YouTube preset from After Effects and both in VLC and uploaded to YouTube it’s flat – the black is not pure black. See for yourself (compare with the blackness of YouTube’s letterboxes in the bottom):

    ———–
    Messing around in After Effects and Premiere Pro

    Specs for whenever I forget to include it in my oh so many forum questions:

    Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit
    CPU: Intel i7-4770K @ 3,5GHz
    RAM: 16 GB G.Skill 2133MHz
    GPU: GeForce GTX 760
    Motherboard: ASUS Z87-Pro
    Seagate 1 TB

  • Chris Wright

    August 17, 2014 at 12:19 pm

    try your red thing again and use an adjustment layer, utility profile converter rec709. it should burn in the
    color management.

  • Alexander Pedersen

    August 18, 2014 at 8:42 pm

    Hey Chris

    I cannot find said “utility profile converter rec709”? Is it a plugin or what? I only found a Color Profile Converter and even though I messed a little around with that it had no effect on the render of the H264 file.

    ———–
    Messing around in After Effects and Premiere Pro

    Specs for whenever I forget to include it in my oh so many forum questions:

    Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit
    CPU: Intel i7-4770K @ 3,5GHz
    RAM: 16 GB G.Skill 2133MHz
    GPU: GeForce GTX 760
    Motherboard: ASUS Z87-Pro
    Seagate 1 TB

  • Chris Wright

    August 18, 2014 at 10:47 pm

    yes, Color Profile Converter.
    obvously, the h.264 is the culprit. did you reimport it back into AE to see if you could match it up?
    there’s 2 different kinds, 0-255 and 16-235 rec709 color management. You can burn in whatever works in matching up with the utility. its not science, its art. haha.

  • Ivan Myles

    August 26, 2014 at 1:28 pm

    The issue might be with the DNxHD codec if you are using the QuickTime version as opposed to the MXF version in CC. I stopped using DNxHD/MOV because of luma clipping and shifting. Try V210, 10-bit YUV, DPX, or AVC-Intra instead.

    From an overall workflow perspective, you might also consider applying the AE effects as pre-processing on the source files, and then bringing the adjusted clips into Premiere Pro using Dynamic Links. Alternatively, try to do the adjustments within Premiere Pro.

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