![]() The idea here is that you want V3 to be only the red channel, V2 to be only the green channel, and V1 to be only the blue channel. You’ll see a “Red”, “Green”, and “Blue” option. Since you’ve dragged the effect onto your video clips, you will now have a “Color Balance (RGB)” option in your Effect Controls window (top-left window of Premiere).Ĭlick the video on your V3 track to select it and, in your Effect Control window, click the arrow to the left of “Color Balance (RGB)” to expand its options. Drag “Color Balance (RGB)” onto each one of your 3 tracks. Duplicate the track once more onto V3.Ĭlick on the effects tab. When you alt+click+drag, you’re duplicating your video track. ![]() Hold alt and click + drag the video up onto the V2 track. We are going to separate the red, green, and blue channels of our gameplay footage. Now we’re going to do a colour glitch effect.Įxplanation: Every image on your computer is made by combining red, green, and blue in various amounts. Click on your audio clip in your timeline and press delete to get rid of it.Unlink your audio from your 8-bit footage by right-clicking on it in the timeline and selecting “Unlink”.Make sure you have 4 tracks by right-clicking on the blank space above your tracks and clicking “Add Tracks…”.Drag your 8-bit footage onto your timeline.Import your 8-bit footage and your VHS overlay into Premiere. ![]() Then, download gameplay footage of an old 8-bit game.ĭownload this VHS overlay while you’re at it: Install a Youtube video downloader add-on onto your Firefox or Chrome browser. ![]() We will offset those colour channels and then apply a VHS-tape warping effect to make it look like you recorded the footage 30 years ago. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |