![color correct final cut pro 2018 color correct final cut pro 2018](https://www.rippletraining.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/Adv-Color-Correction-2022.jpg)
Here is a very manual, but easy to understand approach. If you are talking about short 1-minute videos, I bet you could avoid having to transfer/ship all the raw content. There are several different ways to approach this. putting the media on an SSD or old-style spinner & shipping it just might make more sense. There isn't anything in PrPro that I can think of to do that, however. I think Resolve has a similar tool for auto detecting clips out of a long bit of media.
![color correct final cut pro 2018 color correct final cut pro 2018](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/jSzTxAyqUGM/maxresdefault.jpg)
Export a high-quality file out of Sg, set to export clips not a full sequence, import those clips into PrPro, recreate the sequence, and grade then. If Sg can read you media, you could try installing the last Sg version (available from the previous versions options in the CC app), create a project & import that media into Sg, and do the auto-correction/manual-cleanup process there. It's been a while since I've done that myself, Ann may have more experience with it.
![color correct final cut pro 2018 color correct final cut pro 2018](https://help.apple.com/assets/5FD13B80094622FC2C5E697D/5FD13B84094622FC2C5E6986/en_US/0fa1496e4aeab10324b7457689416671.png)
one with the grade going out, the other in, and blend the two clips for viewability. I've seen people do this on a single track, but more that dupe sections and place them above each other. You then need to make a cut for the frame before the transition begins, one a frame after the transition, and using a process start with one correction and blend out to the other correction. That doth have it's limits, especially dealing with video transitions. I know that SpeedGrade (now officially EOL, sigh) had a method for auto-detection of scenes, where you could have it auto-cut and then do some manual adjusting.