After doing a lot of straining to get those final animation shots finished and final touches to the audio, it can be easily assumed that there is nothing else to take into consideration.
Unfortunately that is not the case, as rendering the whole project can be just as taxing as the above.
This technical issue occurred because I have been combining three different software to export individual clips. Photoshop, After Effects and Premier Pro have been the main programmes.
It has been stated on the Adobe website that RGB colours sometimes get misinterpreted within the final render, causing blue areas to flicker on the image. This has been a problem the occurs mostly when using the animation codec within After Effects. In my case, it is the codec I used from Photoshop renders that caused this problem. Luckily there is a work around as stated on the Adobe site.
Using the crop effect within Premier Pro, is the most effective way of getting rid of the problem without having to animate or re-render any of the clips again. The effect does not directly do anything to the image unless you put in units. The idea is to flatten the troubled clip with the effect, causing the problem to stop. The only issue, is a small flickering at the bottom of the screen which can be fixed during and second render.
More info can be found out here:
http://helpx.adobe.com/premiere-pro/kb/movies-have-blue-cast-exported.html
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