(High
bit-depth) The Luma Curve effect adjusts the brightness and contrast
of a clip using a curve adjustment. You can also specify the color
range to be corrected by using the Secondary Color Correction controls.
- Output
-
Lets you view adjustments in the Program monitor as the final
results (Composite) or tonal value adjustments (Luma), or display
of the alpha matte (Mask).
- Show Split View
-
Displays the left or upper part of the image as the corrected view
and the right or lower part of the image as the uncorrected view.
- Layout
-
Determines whether the Split View images are side by side
(Horizontal) or above and below (Vertical).
- Split View Percent
-
Adjusts the size of the corrected view. The default is 50%.
- Luma
-
Alters the brightness and contrast of the clip when you change
the shape of the curve. Bowing the curve upward lightens the clip
and bowing the curve downward darkens the clip. The steeper sections
of the curve represent portions of the image with greater contrast.
Click to add a point to the curve and drag to manipulate the shape.
You can adjust up to a maximum of 16 points on the curve. To delete
a point, drag it off the graph.
- Secondary Color Correction
-
Specifies the color range to be corrected by the effect.
You can define the color by hue, saturation, and luminance. Click
the triangle to access the controls.
Note: Choose Mask from
the Output menu to view the areas of the image that are selected
as you define the color range.
- Center
-
Defines the central color in the range that you’re specifying.
Select the Eyedropper tool and click anywhere on your screen to
specify a color, which is displayed in the color swatch. Use the
+ Eyedropper tool to extend the color range, and use the ‑ Eyedropper
tool to subtract from the color range. You can also click the swatch
to open the Adobe Color Picker and select the center color.
- Hue, Saturation, and Luma
-
Specify the color range to be corrected by hue, saturation,
or luminance. Click the triangle next to the option name to access
the threshold and softness (feathering) controls to define the hue,
saturation, or luminance range.
- Soften
-
Makes boundaries of the specified area more diffuse, blending
the correction more with the original image. A higher value increases
the softness.
- Edge Thinning
-
Makes the specified area more sharply defined. The correction becomes
more pronounced. A higher value increases the edge definition of
the specified area.
- Invert Limit Color
-
Corrects all colors except for the color range that you specified
with the Secondary Color Correction settings.