Sun May 26, 2024 4:20 pm
Not only do various video players have adjustable parameters, but they tend to put their own slant on color interpretation as well. That is why when color grading you need a monitor that is calibrated to a known standard so that at least the original is correct. When it goes out into the world of TVs, phones, tablets, and computer displays, etc, there is no guarantee that they will show it the way it was intended. That is just the way it is.
There is no way to interfere with how Resolve shows you the original video before you start adding other parameters, which is a good thing. You have to be able to trust something as a starting point.
When I did those rough tweaks on your clip I was using a calibrated display with Video Clean Feed. If I was doing coloring for movies or broadcast I would be using a very color accurate (read expensive) monitor being fed by something like a Decklink card, which bypasses the computers GPU and any other influences the computer may impart.
Resolve Studio 19.0b3 build 33
Dell XPS 8700 i7-4790, 24GB RAM, 2 x Evo 860 SSDs, GTX1060/6GB (551.86 Studio Driver), Win10 Home (22H2), Speed Editor, Faderport mk1, Eizo ColorEdge CS230 + BenQ GW2270 + Samsung SA200, Canon C100mk2, Zoom H2n.