Lumix VLOG Lut Pack #1 + Added Look Luts #1
These are seven uniquely designed luts made for VLOG on Lumix cameras like the GH6, S5ii, G9ii, and more! On top of that, there are 5 added look lut packs to be added as additional looks. Each lut has a normal version of the lut and a Legend version of the lut. The normal version is a standard normalized look, while the Legend is slightly more contrasty in the image.
The seven VLOG luts are the following:
Basic Rec 709
Classic Teal & Orange
Youtube
Sunset
Clean BW
Golden Retro
Retro
The five added look luts are the following:
T&O
Africa
Cinema
Sunset
Simple B&W
Recommendations:
These LUTS are designed to be added looks after the basic color corrections. Once the image is converted to the Rec 709 / Natural look, then you would add one of these 5 luts. These luts are not designed to convert log footage into rec 709. Now while you can use these luts at 100% to get the most contrasty image, I tend to play around the 20-50 percent range to get the best results.
Each lut has a normal version of the lut and a Legend version of the lut. The normal version is a standard normalized look, while the Legend is slightly more contrasty in the image.
Specs:
Now all these luts are in a cube file format so they should all work on any nonlinear editing platform like Final Cut Pro, DaVinci Resolve, and Premiere Pro. I do have a color grading tutorial for VLOG for Final Cut Pro and DaVinci Resolve linked below.
These are seven uniquely designed luts made for VLOG on Lumix cameras like the GH6, S5ii, G9ii, and more! On top of that, there are 5 added look lut packs to be added as additional looks. Each lut has a normal version of the lut and a Legend version of the lut. The normal version is a standard normalized look, while the Legend is slightly more contrasty in the image.
The seven VLOG luts are the following:
Basic Rec 709
Classic Teal & Orange
Youtube
Sunset
Clean BW
Golden Retro
Retro
The five added look luts are the following:
T&O
Africa
Cinema
Sunset
Simple B&W
Recommendations:
These LUTS are designed to be added looks after the basic color corrections. Once the image is converted to the Rec 709 / Natural look, then you would add one of these 5 luts. These luts are not designed to convert log footage into rec 709. Now while you can use these luts at 100% to get the most contrasty image, I tend to play around the 20-50 percent range to get the best results.
Each lut has a normal version of the lut and a Legend version of the lut. The normal version is a standard normalized look, while the Legend is slightly more contrasty in the image.
Specs:
Now all these luts are in a cube file format so they should all work on any nonlinear editing platform like Final Cut Pro, DaVinci Resolve, and Premiere Pro. I do have a color grading tutorial for VLOG for Final Cut Pro and DaVinci Resolve linked below.
These are seven uniquely designed luts made for VLOG on Lumix cameras like the GH6, S5ii, G9ii, and more! On top of that, there are 5 added look lut packs to be added as additional looks. Each lut has a normal version of the lut and a Legend version of the lut. The normal version is a standard normalized look, while the Legend is slightly more contrasty in the image.
The seven VLOG luts are the following:
Basic Rec 709
Classic Teal & Orange
Youtube
Sunset
Clean BW
Golden Retro
Retro
The five added look luts are the following:
T&O
Africa
Cinema
Sunset
Simple B&W
Recommendations:
These LUTS are designed to be added looks after the basic color corrections. Once the image is converted to the Rec 709 / Natural look, then you would add one of these 5 luts. These luts are not designed to convert log footage into rec 709. Now while you can use these luts at 100% to get the most contrasty image, I tend to play around the 20-50 percent range to get the best results.
Each lut has a normal version of the lut and a Legend version of the lut. The normal version is a standard normalized look, while the Legend is slightly more contrasty in the image.
Specs:
Now all these luts are in a cube file format so they should all work on any nonlinear editing platform like Final Cut Pro, DaVinci Resolve, and Premiere Pro. I do have a color grading tutorial for VLOG for Final Cut Pro and DaVinci Resolve linked below.