![]() ![]() Instead of using Xrite software use Displa圜AL and calibrate & profile your screen acording to your preferences. If you do not have a measurement device, get i1displaypro. ![]() Once learned, these concepts are easier to apply to the world of video color correction. If someone on this forum has a suggestion of a book or training for Pierre, I'm sure he would appreciate it.įor me, I learned most of these concepts by learning Adobe Photoshop, and there are a lot of resources for learning Photoshop and Photoshop color management. Unfortunately I'd need to write a book to explain even the basic workflows, so I can't here in a forum post. I can see from the nature of your question that you don't have much experience with motion picture color correction. I don't have Adobe Premiere, so I can't check that. I mean viewing in Resolve or maybe the VLC player. Keep in mind that I don't mean viewing in the QuickTime player. viewing video in Resolve looks pretty close to correct. I've created a color profile for REC709 gamma 2.2 or 2.4 (you can make one for each and choose in systems settings in the mac). Even though video color correction software is not usually talking to the operating system color management, your screen will already be close to the REC709 standard, so operating system color management is not required, or even desired here.įor example, I have a 2013 Mac Book Pro Retina with a Retina display that is not wide gamut P3. With this device and software you can calibrate your screen and create a profile that will store the calibration in the Mac operating system. What you should get is the X-Rite iOne Display Pro colorimeter device and software to create a. That said, I would not use any of the profile selections that you've listed as, from my experience, they are far from accurate. And this means that is is possible to create a color profile for the display that is close to the HD video standard of REC709. Why good? This means that the color gamut of the display is very likely limited to REC709 colorspace. The good news, maybe, is that this machine does not seem to have a wide gamut, P3 Retina display. You don't say what software you'll be using, but I'm thinking that the 2gb vRAM on this machine is not enough to run DaVinci Resolve successfully. Click to expand.I don't think this is the best choice for color grading video. ![]()
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