About Thomas Fitzgerald

Thomas is a professional fine art photographer and writer specialising in photography related instructional books as well as travel writing and street photography. 

Lightroom and Photoshop to get Colour Grading

Lightroom and Photoshop to get Colour Grading

A recent technology demonstration from Adobe showed off a new feature coming to Camera RAW and Lightroom: Colour Grading. The applications will get a three way colour corrector similar to video editing applications, and a feature that has been present for some time in Capture One.

I saw some commentary on this on a few different places that I feel that I need to correct. The first was the accusation that Adobe was copying this feature from Capture One. While it is likely that they decided to add it to Lightroom because of its existence in Capture One, Capture One did not invent this feature. This has been a main stay of colour grading in professional editing systems since the 80s.

Secondly, I saw someone else saying that Capture One probably originally copied it from Adobe. That’s not true either.

The now standard three way colour corrector has been around for a long time. From what I can tell it was a feature of Davinci System’s telecine colour correction systems from the mid 80s. I don’t know if they invented it or not, but that’s one of the earliest references to the layout I can find. Davinci systems at the time was creating high end hardware colour correction systems for film and television production, and it later moved into software. That, you may have heard of - “Davinci Resolve”. This was bought by Blackmagic design in 2009 who radically dropped the price of the software and made it much more well known and widespread.

The upshot of all this is that the three way colour corrector used in colour grading has been around for a long time. When it comes to stills, I’m not sure what the first application to use it was. Apple's aperture had a simplified version of this interface for tinting the shadows, midtones and highlights, but it wasn't a full three-way colour corrector.

Tint controls in Aperture

Tint controls in Aperture

Capture One was probably the most mainstream stills editing application to adopt this interface. It even lets you use hardware colour grading panels from video editing systems.

I for one am glad that this is coming to Lightroom and Photoshop, as it is a really useful tool. I use it all the time in both video work and when working in Capture One, and I think this is good that this becomes a standard part of people’s toolset. I have a video on how to use this feature in Capture One, linked below, and once this is released, I’ll be covering the Lightroom and Photoshop version too.


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Capture One Offering 25% off Annual Prepaid Subscriptions

Capture One Offering 25% off Annual Prepaid Subscriptions

Making some of my Capture One Styles and eBooks available via Gumroad

Making some of my Capture One Styles and eBooks available via Gumroad