enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. 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 ...

  3. DaVinci Resolve - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DaVinci_Resolve

    DaVinci Resolve is a proprietary color grading, color correction, visual effects, and audio post-production video editing application for macOS, Windows, and Linux, developed by Australian company Blackmagic Design.

  4. ColorSync - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ColorSync

    Apple developed the original 1.0 version of ColorSync as a Mac-only architecture, which made it into an operating system release in 1993. In the same year, Apple co-founded the International Color Consortium (ICC) to develop a cross-platform profile format which became part of ColorSync 2.0. [1]

  5. Final Cut Studio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Final_Cut_Studio

    Color 1.5 – a new color grading application adapted from Silicon Color's FinalTouch. Compressor 3.5 – a video encoding tool for outputting projects in different formats. Cinema Tools 4.5 – tools specific to film processing. Qmaster 3 – a distributed processing tool. The applications are designed to integrate as a suite, to form a workflow.

  6. Color grading - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color_grading

    A photograph color graded into orange and teal, complementary colors commonly used in Hollywood films. Color grading is a post-production process common to filmmaking and video editing of altering the appearance of an image for presentation in different environments on different devices.

  7. Final Cut Pro - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Final_Cut_Pro

    Advanced color grading; ... The demonstration showed both Mac and Windows versions of the software, with the Mac version using a Truevision RTX dual-stream real-time ...

  8. List of software palettes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_software_palettes

    This is a list of software palettes used by computers. Systems that use a 4-bit or 8-bit pixel depth can display up to 16 or 256 colors simultaneously. Many personal computers in the early 1990s displayed at most 256 different colors, freely selected by software (either by the user or by a program) from their wider hardware's RGB color palette.

  9. 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.