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Full Version: Why does color management in DaVinci Resolve flatten my footage at first?
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So I’ve been trying to get better at color grading my short films, and I keep hearing about the importance of a proper color managed workflow. I finally set one up in DaVinci Resolve, but honestly, it’s making everything look way flatter and less vibrant in my timeline than what I shot. I’m sticking with it because I know it’s supposed to give more control, but right now it just feels like I’m adding a bunch of steps to make my footage look worse before I can even start. Has anyone else gone through this and felt a bit lost at first?
Yep I felt that too. switching to a color managed workflow can make clips look flatter in the timeline until you get the hang of the baseline. It can feel like you’re losing contrast while you’re still trying to set the look, but it starts to make sense once you compare to an initial reference and build from there.
In a color managed workflow the idea is to preserve a color space from capture to export so your grading has real data to work with. If the timeline is flat, check your timeline color space and make sure you are grading in a scope that matches what you shot. Try disabling the viewer LUT and grade with scopes first then re enable to judge the final look.
I get the vibe you are chasing a punchy look and the workflow is slowing you down. Maybe you’re grading against a pipeline you only partly trust. A step back might be to lock a look on a single shot and then apply that across the sequence rather than trying to dial the whole thing in at once.
What if the issue isn’t the workflow but how you frame the shots. color managed workflow shines when your exposure and white balance are consistent. If your scenes drift, the system will flatten things to keep within the gamut. Focus on getting a clean base grade first.
I remember feeling the same and then realizing the stage is not the final product. The key is to build habits a little at a time and stick to a small reference palette. The rest comes with practice.
Have you tried grading a tiny controlled clip with the color managed setup and comparing it to a shot without it to spot where the flattening comes from?