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Click "Enable" to see the results.
The Amount slider allows you to quickly dial the correction up or down.
This is often desirable and really depends on the material and your intent but
the Match Brightness slider allows for an easy override that maintains the
brightness of your clip while still correcting the color. To maintain the
brightness of the destination clip, move the Match Brightness slider towards
zero. Move the slider between zero and 1 to brighten or darken your clip by the
desired amount. You can even push past the Reference scene brightness level
by taking the slider beyond 1.
Enable the "Match 2" checkbox to bring up the second match.
Two more swatches will appear below the current swatches labelled Ref 2 and Dest 2
as well as a Match Blend slider. This slider defaults to a value of 1, which represents
100% of the first match you made. When the slider is at 2 the correction is being
made using 100% of the second match. A value of 1.5 gives a 50/50 mix of the two.
It normally pays to disable the effect by unchecking Enable, and using the Match 2
swatches to pick again, although sometimes picking on top of the original correction
can provide some nice fine-tuning.
Even if you don't blend Match 2 with Match 1 it is quite a useful option for trying out
a couple of matches and switching between them.
Change the High, Mid or Low Mode to access this operation.
Another swatch will appear to enable you to use a reference clip, as with Match Color.
Enable the Fine-Tune checkbox to reveal the Fine-Tune controls.
You'll find control over Global, High, Mid and Low saturation.
In the Saturation section you’ll find a Saturation S-Curve option complete with pivot slider that gives you some unique creative control.
The Bias control allows you to adjust the correction amount applied to each channel for the entire effect.