Recty
New member
This is my time lapse video I posted about a week ago...
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If you'll watch it, please, you'll notice that it changes from bluish colors, which is pretty true to life, to orange/brownish, then slowly goes back to blue. It ruins the video, for me.
That color change is not done in post processing, it actually came out of the camera like that... I'm not sure what caused the camera to white balance differently, but it definitely did.
For what it's worth, the software I use is Sony Vegas Video (very new to it, dont know much) and Photoshop CS4.
So my question is, how do I fix this white balance problem? My only way I could think of to fix it is this...
Adjust the first picture how I want, write down the white balance and tint value. Do the same for the middle photograph in the time lapse and then end photograph. Or I suppose I could just do it for any sections that have problems...
So say for example I want the white balance set to -20 and the tint to +10. Then by frame 100, I need the white balance set to -10 and the tint to +30. What I would then do is open 10 frames at a time in CS4 in the open dialog window with all the sliders and basically move the white balance to -19 and the tint to +12 and synchronize all those 10 pictures, then save them out like that.
Then I'd go to the next 10 in the sequence, change the white balance to -18 and the tint +14... synch them all and move on to the next time, basically incrementally changing each section of pictures to eventually reach my desired levels of white balance and tint. This would slowly and smoothly keep the levels in line, rather than just halfway through the video set the levels to exactly what they need to be... which would be probably more distracting than it is right now.
Obviously, this is a huge huge pain. If I had a 2000 image timelapse I wanted to do, this would be a huge investment in time.
Is there any easy way to fix white balance issues like I'm wanting to, with the software I have? If there isnt, do I need to buy some other software that will do this? I'd really rather stick to CS4 and Vegas Video if at all possible.
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If you'll watch it, please, you'll notice that it changes from bluish colors, which is pretty true to life, to orange/brownish, then slowly goes back to blue. It ruins the video, for me.
That color change is not done in post processing, it actually came out of the camera like that... I'm not sure what caused the camera to white balance differently, but it definitely did.
For what it's worth, the software I use is Sony Vegas Video (very new to it, dont know much) and Photoshop CS4.
So my question is, how do I fix this white balance problem? My only way I could think of to fix it is this...
Adjust the first picture how I want, write down the white balance and tint value. Do the same for the middle photograph in the time lapse and then end photograph. Or I suppose I could just do it for any sections that have problems...
So say for example I want the white balance set to -20 and the tint to +10. Then by frame 100, I need the white balance set to -10 and the tint to +30. What I would then do is open 10 frames at a time in CS4 in the open dialog window with all the sliders and basically move the white balance to -19 and the tint to +12 and synchronize all those 10 pictures, then save them out like that.
Then I'd go to the next 10 in the sequence, change the white balance to -18 and the tint +14... synch them all and move on to the next time, basically incrementally changing each section of pictures to eventually reach my desired levels of white balance and tint. This would slowly and smoothly keep the levels in line, rather than just halfway through the video set the levels to exactly what they need to be... which would be probably more distracting than it is right now.
Obviously, this is a huge huge pain. If I had a 2000 image timelapse I wanted to do, this would be a huge investment in time.
Is there any easy way to fix white balance issues like I'm wanting to, with the software I have? If there isnt, do I need to buy some other software that will do this? I'd really rather stick to CS4 and Vegas Video if at all possible.