Film Looks Vol. 1 — Cinematic Grading Toolkit

Film Looks Vol. 1: 50 Film-Inspired LUTs for Photo & Video

Bring cinematic color and texture to your photos and videos with Film Looks Vol. 1, a curated collection of 50 film-inspired LUTs (Lookup Tables) designed to emulate classic and contemporary film stocks. Whether you’re a photographer, videographer, or content creator, this pack gives you an efficient, creative shortcut to achieve professional-grade color grading across projects.

What’s inside

  • 50 versatile LUTs: Ranging from subtle filmic tweaks to bold cinematic looks.
  • Multiple film emulations: Classic color motion film, faded vintage stocks, high-contrast modern looks, and nuanced monochrome conversions.
  • Neutral starting points: Calibrated for common color spaces (Rec.709 and sRGB), with notes for working in Log and RAW footage.
  • Compatibility: Usable in Premiere Pro, DaVinci Resolve, Final Cut Pro, Photoshop, Lightroom (via 3D LUT import), and most LUT-supporting apps.
  • Installation guide & preview images: Quick-start instructions and before/after reference shots.

Key benefits

  • Save time: Apply a finished look in seconds instead of building grades from scratch.
  • Consistency: Match the same filmic aesthetic across photo and video projects for a cohesive brand or series.
  • Creative starting points: Use each LUT as-is or as a base for deeper grading — adjust exposure, contrast, and selective color to taste.
  • Education: Study how film-inspired colors behave on skin tones, highlights, and shadows to improve your own grading instincts.

Highlighted LUT groups

  1. Classic Color Films — Warm, saturated profiles with punchy mids and gentle roll-off in highlights for a timeless cinematic feel.
  2. Muted & Pastel Stocks — Soft contrast, lowered saturation, and pastel casts for indie and editorial looks.
  3. High-Contrast Modern — Deep blacks, crisp highlights, and strong color separation for contemporary drama.
  4. Vintage Fades — Film fade, grain-friendly desaturation, and color shifts that mimic aged negatives.
  5. Black & White Emulations — Tonal film curves and split-toning for rich monochrome images.

How to use effectively

  1. Start neutral: Correct exposure and white balance first.
  2. Choose a LUT that fits your mood: Preview several; LUTs look different on varying source footage.
  3. Blend and adjust: Lower opacity or use layer blending modes in Photoshop/Resolve to dial intensity.
  4. Protect skin tones: Use masks or selective color tools if a LUT shifts skin hues undesirably.
  5. Add finishing touches: Grain, vignette, and film scratches can enhance authenticity.

Technical tips

  • For Log footage, apply the LUT after converting to Rec.709 or use a Log-specific variant included in the pack.
  • When working in 10-bit color pipelines, use higher bit-depth files to avoid banding when applying strong LUTs.
  • If exporting for web, preview at target compression settings to ensure the LUT holds up under codec artifacts.

Ideal users

  • Wedding and event videographers wanting cinematic warmth.
  • Freelance photographers seeking quick editorial looks.
  • Social creators who need consistent color across short-form videos.
  • Filmmakers and colorists looking for inspiration or time-saving base grades.

Final thoughts

Film Looks Vol. 1: 50 Film-Inspired LUTs for Photo & Video is a practical and creative toolkit that speeds up your workflow while delivering the aesthetic richness of film. Use it as a ready-made grading solution or a learning resource to refine your color grading style. Apply, tweak, and let the looks tell your story.

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