wbflare
Description
Applies a blown-out white-balance flare that washes the frame in bright, overexposed warmth.
The effect simulates a camera whose white balance has catastrophically failed, producing harsh brightness spikes, color melt, and an unstable exposure cast.
Purpose
wbflare is designed for creators who want:
intense, flared overexposure resembling broken auto-WB,
cinematic whiteouts and warm, blooming flare pulses,
chaotic light wash reminiscent of damaged DSLR sensors,
a stylized flare aesthetic for music videos, montage, or collage,
a single-command solution with no configuration required.
How It Works
White Balance Miscalibration Simulation
The image is shifted toward overly warm, blown-out values.
Flare Bloom
Bright areas bloom outward aggressively, swallowing surrounding detail.
Exposure Push
Midtones and highlights ascend toward near-white, creating clip-heavy transitions.
Encoding
Output is encoded using Videobeaux global CRF, codec, and pixel-format settings.
Program Template
videobeaux -P wbflare \
-i input.mp4 \
-o output.mp4
Arguments
(No additional program-specific arguments; uses global videobeaux options only.)
Real World Example
videobeaux -P wbflare \
-i myvideo.mp4 \
-o wbflare_styled.mp4
Program Output
Your browser does not support the video tag.
Technical Notes
Flare intensity is influenced by scene brightness—high-key footage becomes extremely washed out.
Skin tones may lose detail entirely as white balance collapses.
Compression interacts strongly with blown highlights; higher CRF introduces chaotic flare grit.
Works well as a transition or emotional accent, especially during musical peaks.
Recommended Usage
Music-video chorus drops or emotional surges.
Stylized whiteouts in experimental film or collage.
Dreamlike or transcendental sequences.
Grungy digital “camera malfunction” aesthetics.
Transitional flare blasts between scenes.
Quality Tips
Lower CRF preserves cleaner bloom gradients.
Higher CRF produces gritty, noisy flare textures.
Pair with overexposed_stutter for extreme blown-out instability.
Combine with bad_contrast to deepen shadows beneath the flare.
Apply before LUTs for LUT-reactive highlights; apply after LUTs for a uniform whiteout.