Color

LUT

A LUT (Look-Up Table) is a mathematical table that maps input color values to output color values, used to quickly apply a specific color transformation or creative look to footage.

A LUT — short for Look-Up Table — is essentially a preset color transformation stored as a file. When applied to footage, it remaps every color in the image according to predefined rules. LUTs come in two main varieties: technical LUTs that convert between color spaces (for example, from LOG to Rec.709) and creative LUTs that apply a stylistic look (like a vintage film emulation or a specific cinematic grade).

Technical LUTs are essential in professional workflows. Cameras that shoot in LOG profiles capture flat, desaturated images that preserve maximum dynamic range. A conversion LUT transforms this flat footage into a standard viewing color space, restoring contrast and saturation as a starting point for further grading. Without this step, LOG footage looks washed out and unappealing.

Creative LUTs are popular for establishing a consistent look quickly. However, professionals treat them as starting points rather than finished grades. A LUT applied to different footage shot under different conditions will produce inconsistent results, so additional manual adjustment is always needed. When evaluating a color grade, the quality of manual refinement matters far more than which LUT was used as a foundation.

Related Terms

Back to Glossary
LUT — Glossary | O'Yelen Studio