What Is a LUT in Color Grading?
A LUT (Look-Up Table) is a mathematical preset that transforms color values in an image. It maps input colors to output colors, allowing quick application of color corrections, creative looks, or technical conversions.
How LUTs Work
A LUT is essentially a table that says "for input color X, output color Y." Instead of calculating complex color transformations in real-time, the software looks up the result in the table — hence "look-up table."
For example, a LUT might transform:
- Flat, low-contrast LOG footage → Normal-looking Rec. 709
- Standard video → Film-like color palette
- Rec. 709 → P3 cinema color space
Types of LUTs
1D LUT
Transforms each color channel (R, G, B) independently. Used for:
- Gamma/lift/gain adjustments
- Contrast curves
- Simple tonal corrections
1D LUTs are small and fast but limited — they can't handle complex color relationships.
3D LUT
Transforms colors based on the combined R, G, B values. Can handle:
- Complex color grading looks
- Color space conversions
- Hue-specific adjustments
3D LUTs are larger (typically 33×33×33 or 65×65×65 cube) but much more powerful.
Common LUT Types in Production
Technical LUTs
- Camera LOG → Rec. 709: Converts flat camera footage to viewable range.
- Color space conversions: Rec. 709 → P3, sRGB → ACEScg.
- Display calibration: Matches monitor to standard.
Creative LUTs
- Film emulation: Mimics the look of specific film stocks.
- Style looks: Cinematic looks, vintage effects.
- Show LUTs: Custom looks developed for specific productions.
LUTs in the Production Pipeline
- On-set: DIT applies a viewing LUT so LOG footage looks normal on monitors.
- Editing: Editor applies the same LUT to maintain consistent look during dailies.
- Color grading: Colorist works on the underlying LOG footage, building a new grade that may incorporate or replace the on-set LUT.
- Delivery: Final LUTs may be exported for archival or format conversion.
LUT File Formats
| Extension | Format | Common Use |
|---|---|---|
| .cube | Adobe/Resolve Cube | Most common, widely supported |
| .3dl | Autodesk 3D LUT | Flame, older systems |
| .look | ARRI Look | ARRI cameras and tools |
| .csp | Cinespace | Rising Sun Research |
LUT Limitations
- Non-reversible: A LUT "bakes in" a look — you can't easily undo it without the original.
- Footage-specific: A LUT designed for ARRI LOG-C won't work correctly on Sony S-Log.
- No intelligence: A LUT applies the same transform regardless of content — it won't adjust for different skin tones or lighting.
Learn about color grading and file transfer:
What Is Color Grading? →