If you walked the Post|Production World floor at NAB Show this April, you felt the change before anyone announced it. Editors were huddled around demo stations. Colorists were comparing notes. Adobe's booth was running standing-room sessions, and the question following every conversation was the same one: is this the year Premiere finally rethinks color from the ground up?
The answer came on Sunday afternoon, April 19, in room N250LMR. Drex Lee and Jason Druss took the stage for a session titled The Future of Editing Begins in Premiere, and Adobe pulled the cover off the biggest structural change to Premiere in more than a decade: a new application built directly inside Premiere, designed to expand what's possible at the timeline and to close the gap between what editors imagine and what they can deliver without leaving the edit.
For the FMC community, this was the moment we had been waiting on.
The framing on stage was deliberate. Adobe wasn't shipping an incremental feature update or a tools menu refresh. The new application is positioned as a structural evolution of Premiere itself, built side-by-side with hundreds of editors across disciplines and informed by the real pressures of modern post-production: shorter timelines, more outputs, faster client review cycles, and an expanding gap between the look an editor can imagine and the tools available to deliver it inside a single application.
The Color Mode reveal is part of that evolution. It's a complete color grading experience built into the Premiere environment, with its own workspace, its own panel architecture, and its own approach to color management. From the demos at NAB, three things stood out:
If the reveal had ended there, it would have been a significant moment for Premiere. The bigger story is what's around it.
The session was Adobe's first public reveal of the new system, and the speaker pairing said a lot about how Adobe is positioning the work.
Jason Druss is a Principal Product Marketing Manager at Adobe, supporting Premiere and After Effects. Before Adobe, he spent fifteen years as a working colorist. He graded at NFL Films. He was a Senior Colorist at Warner Bros. Discovery. He ran his own post house in Philadelphia called Good Grades. The reason that résumé matters: Adobe didn't put a marketer on stage to introduce a color product. They put a colorist who happens to do marketing on stage, and the demo flowed accordingly. The walkthrough showed the kind of grading decisions a working colorist would actually make in a client session, not the kind of demo that only lands in a controlled environment.
Drex Lee is a highly-skilled content creator and Mega Instagram influencer whose work breaks down visual storytelling through a creator's lens. He brought the perspective of the audience that has driven so much of the demand for better color tools inside the edit: editors and creators who are responsible for the entire post-production pass on their own work. Lee's piece of the session connected the new Color Mode to the way modern creators actually move from concept to delivery, often without the support of a dedicated color department.
That pairing is the story. Adobe is signaling that Color Mode is not a tool for one type of user. It's built for the colorist who wants speed and the editor or creator who wants depth without leaving Premiere.
Future Media Concepts has been an Adobe Authorized Training Center for the entire run of Premiere's modern life. We teach Premiere every month. We field the questions our students bring out of working post-production environments. And we have spent the last several years watching the same pattern repeat: editors come to us asking for a serious color education, and the honest answer was always that the most powerful color tools were not in Premiere.
That answer changes now.
FMC is launching Premiere 2026 Color Mode, a one-day instructor-led course built around the new Color Mode beta. The first cohort runs Wednesday, July 8, 2026. We've structured the curriculum around the same logical arc Adobe walked through at NAB: workspace and Clip Grid first, color management fundamentals second, basic adjustments, advanced controls, Style modules, masks, scopes, and shipping the grade. The course also covers how Color Mode integrates with the Edit Mode editors already work in, including the pitfalls of mixing Lumetri and Color Mode in the same project.
Color Mode is in beta, which is itself part of why this course exists. Our instructors are sitting inside the same feedback loop Adobe built the application around. Editors who come to the July 8 cohort will be among the first working professionals in the industry to learn Color Mode from a structured curriculum, not from a YouTube tutorial or a forum thread. The course recurs monthly through the back half of 2026 and into early 2027, so teams can stagger seats across their roster as project pressure allows.
The takeaway from NAB Show isn't that Premiere has a new feature. The takeaway is that Adobe is reorienting what Premiere is. For a long time, the way to talk about Premiere was as an editor's tool with capable color built in. Color Mode signals a different framing: Premiere as a creative environment where color is no longer a station that an editor passes through on the way somewhere else.
That has practical consequences for how editors structure their careers, how post-production teams budget for color work, and how facilities scope tool stacks. None of those decisions get made in a vacuum. They get made by working professionals reading the new release, putting it through real client work, and figuring out what changes about their day-to-day.
The fastest way to make those decisions well is to learn the tool. We built the July 8 course for exactly that purpose.
If you saw the NAB session live, or you've been watching the conversation play out across LinkedIn and the post-production forums in the weeks since, you already know the question this raises: is Color Mode actually going to change the way you work?
The honest answer is that you'll know in one day with the tool in your hands. That's what the course is for.
Premiere just changed. The editors who internalize what Color Mode actually does, and the teams that get fluent first, will define what the next chapter of post-production looks like. We'll see you in class.
Photography credits: Syvonne K Photography & Design