- YOUTUBE ADOBE AFTER EFFECTS CS5 MP4
- YOUTUBE ADOBE AFTER EFFECTS CS5 WINDOWS 10
- YOUTUBE ADOBE AFTER EFFECTS CS5 PRO
This might sound like a crude fix but this is the best solution I've found so far.Adobe text effects To reach the Arc Effect menu, go to Effect > Warp > Arc. DO NOT import AE-exported videos back into AE to work with (unless it is an SD video)Īlso if you're going to upload your videos to Youtube, exporting it this way should not cause color shifts when viewed on Youtube.
You might need to be familiar with command prompt to use it. I highly recommend using the FFmpeg codec. So when it is imported back into After Effects, the colors will offset back to original. This will cause the color to shift in the same amount in reverse in hue, meaning instead of the reds looking more orange than original, it will look more magenta than the original. If you have a large raw video file (say like an MOV) and you want to size it down so that it is easier to work with in AE, use other video encoders that tag your video with the appropriate color space during encoding to convert your video first. This explains why SD videos don't get the color shift when imported into AE.Īnyway, to counter this problem if After Effects is all you've got, here's a solution (workaround is you will): In that thread it says After Effects ignores color matrix flags and uses BT.601 regardless of whether the video is SD or HD, or HD tagged with the BT.709 color matrix. This led me to this thread which states in detail about the compatibility of these color spaces and how video editing programs process them: SD videos use BT.601 whereas HD videos use BT.709. From this, the problem seems to have something to do with the colormatrix (or color space) standards for SD and HD videos. It turned out that only the HD ones have the color shift. I did further testing by exporting the video out of AE in SD and HD and then importing them back into AE to see if the colors are right. It seems like this problem has already been addressed before on this thread: Color Shifts when rendering to H.264 Blu-rayĪfter searching the internet and asking around, I found out that the color shifts are caused by how After Effects interprets and encodes videos. Ok just in case there are AE users out there who encounter this same problem, I'll post all my findings and best solution here. So I guess it's not an After Effects version issue.Ĭan anyone tell me what is causing this color change and how I can export my video with After Effects without any color change in other video formats besides lossless?
YOUTUBE ADOBE AFTER EFFECTS CS5 WINDOWS 10
My brother's computer has Windows 10 and he uses After Effects CC 2017. Thinking that it might be a problem with my computer, I even used my brother's computer to do an export of the video but the output still had the same color shifts. As for hardware(might not be relevant but just in case), I am using Intel Core i5-2400 and Zotac NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1050 Graphics Card.
YOUTUBE ADOBE AFTER EFFECTS CS5 PRO
I'm using After Effects CS5 64-bit with Windows 8.1 Pro 64-bit. I've also tried encoding the lossless file in Adobe Media Encoder hoping to get a smaller-sized video file without any shift in colors but the output was exactly the same as when I exported it using After Effects. AVI lossless (probably because there are not codecs used) but the file size is too big for me to work with or upload to Youtube. The only export format that preserves the original colors is.
I've also tried exporting it with the different After Effects Color Management and Working Space settings but all that also produced the same results except for one Working Space, namely "Apple RGB", that produced a close color hue which was still different from the original colors. I've tried different codecs in After Effects but they all produce the same color-shifted result.
The original video is a 25.8GB lossless MOV file that was exported out of Adobe Animate CC using the "Export Video." option. Whereas the green color of the jacket (the thing that the fist is punching) has a more bluish hue and looks darker compared to the original. Notice that the red color of the arm(left) has a more yellowish hue making it look orange(right).
YOUTUBE ADOBE AFTER EFFECTS CS5 MP4
In the image above, the screenshot on the left is from the original video and on the right is an MP4 h264 version of it exported out of After Effects. The change in colors are exceptionally noticeable in the green and red colors in the video. Whenever I export my videos using After Effects, the colors of the video will always turn out to have a different hue and saturation. I've been struggling to fix this problem for a long time.