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Is there any way I can correct for this in my SONY Movie Studio 13 Suite software? I found a brightness and Contrast FX but I haven't had much luck with it.
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Over exposure correction?
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Over exposure correction?I've got about an hours worth of video that I recorded with my SONY FDR AX100 of my sons soccer game today. I thought I had the ND filters activated but apparently I didn't
![]() Is there any way I can correct for this in my SONY Movie Studio 13 Suite software? I found a brightness and Contrast FX but I haven't had much luck with it. Dell PC WINDOWS 10 PRO, 64-bit, Ver:1607, OS BLD: 14393.1066
INTEL Core: i7-4790, CPU @3.60 GHz, Instld RAM:16.0 GB GeForce GTX 745, Driver ver: 376.53, Tot avail grap: 12225 MB, Ded vid mem: 4096 MB DDR3 Shared Sys Mem: 8159 MB, DirectX Runtime Ver:12.0
Re: Over exposure correction?It depends on how over-exposed it is, MrG.
A little bright may be fixable. But if colors are washed out completely, there's just no way to recover them. If you'd like, you post a screen capture of a typical shot and we can advise if we think it's fixable. HP Envy with 2.9/4.4 ghz i7-10700 and 16 gig of RAM running Windows 11 Pro
Re: Over exposure correction?You might check the software to see if it has an auto color effect you can place on the clip.
Sidd "Life moves pretty fast. If you don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it." ..... Ferris Bueller
Re: Over exposure correction?Sidd,
I suspected I can't get it back to where I'd like to have it but I think there should be some ways I can correct it a little anyway. I've tried saving a screen capture and posting it but I'm not sure I've done it correctly. You do not have the required permissions to view the files attached to this post. Dell PC WINDOWS 10 PRO, 64-bit, Ver:1607, OS BLD: 14393.1066
INTEL Core: i7-4790, CPU @3.60 GHz, Instld RAM:16.0 GB GeForce GTX 745, Driver ver: 376.53, Tot avail grap: 12225 MB, Ded vid mem: 4096 MB DDR3 Shared Sys Mem: 8159 MB, DirectX Runtime Ver:12.0
Re: Over exposure correction?I do see some hotspots in there, but over all you've got a lot of detail you can use to back the brightness/exposure off. You might try adding a Levels effect to it and backing the Gamma level below it's default of 1.0. It won't take much so be sure to tread lightly with that setting.
Dell Studio XPS 8100, Intel Core i7 2.8GHz, 4GB RAM, 64-Bit Win7. Camera gear: 2x Canon 550D's, 1x Canon EOS 6D body, Sigma 70-200mm f2.8 & 17-50mm f2.8, Canon EF 50mm f/1.8 & 24-70mm f/2.8L, and two 420EX flashes.
Re: Over exposure correction?Many Thanks Kent,
I was trying to use the 'brightness/contrast' function and it just wasn't doing what I wanted it to. I hadn't tried the 'Levels Effect' before and it did seem easier to use and pretty much did what I was wanting. Obviously it can't correct completely for operator error ![]() Mike Dell PC WINDOWS 10 PRO, 64-bit, Ver:1607, OS BLD: 14393.1066
INTEL Core: i7-4790, CPU @3.60 GHz, Instld RAM:16.0 GB GeForce GTX 745, Driver ver: 376.53, Tot avail grap: 12225 MB, Ded vid mem: 4096 MB DDR3 Shared Sys Mem: 8159 MB, DirectX Runtime Ver:12.0
6 posts
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