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  2. da Vinci Systems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Da_Vinci_Systems

    da Vinci Systems was an American digital cinema company founded in 1984 in Coral Springs, Florida [1] as a spinoff of Video Tape Associates. It was known for its hardware-based color correction products, GPU-based color grading, digital mastering systems, and film restoration and remastering systems.

  3. DaVinci Resolve - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DaVinci_Resolve

    The software includes modules for video editing, color correction, [51] [52] audio mixing/effects (including Fairlight), and visual effects (including Fusion). [28] It can either be used as an intermediary between other NLE software and Digital Cinema Package creation software, [53] [54] [55] or as a standalone end-to-end video editing application.

  4. Stefan Sonnenfeld - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stefan_Sonnenfeld

    [4] [5] Sonnenfeld also received the HPA Award Best Color Grading (Feature Film) for 300 in 2007 and was the recipient of the HPA Award Outstanding Color Grading (Commercial) for Pepsi "Pass" in 2009. In 2010 he received the HPA Award for Outstanding Color Grading Using a DI Process for Alice in Wonderland. [6]

  5. Color (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color_(software)

    Color is a professional color-grading application developed by Apple for its Mac OS X operating system. It was one of the major applications included as part of the Final Cut Studio video-production suite. The application was originally called FinalTouch and was developed by Silicon Color, until the company was acquired by Apple in October 2006 ...

  6. Color grading - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color_grading

    Color grading is one of the most labour intensive parts of video editing. Traditionally, color grading was done towards practical goals. For example, in the film Marianne, grading was used so that night scenes could be filmed more cheaply in daylight. Secondary color grading was originally used to establish color continuity; however, the trend ...

  7. Color suite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color_suite

    A color suite may use one video standard or be able to change configuration to a number of standards like: high-definition video, NTSC, or PAL or a DI workflow. Color suites are sometime placed in digital cinema movie theaters with a video projector for color correction to that display format. Blackmagic Design DaVinci Resolve Advanced Panel

  8. Autodesk Media and Entertainment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autodesk_Media_and...

    Lustre is color grading software originally developed by Mark Jaszberenyi, Gyula Priskin and Tamas Perlaki at Colorfront in Hungary. The application was first packaged as a plugin for Flame product under the name "Colorstar" to emulate film type color grading using printer lights controls. It was then developed as a standalone software.

  9. Nuke (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuke_(software)

    Nuke is a node-based digital compositing and visual effects application first developed by Digital Domain and used for television and film post-production.Nuke is available for Windows, macOS (up to Monterey natively), and RHEL/CentOS. [2]