Now I have to take another drink! Read these:
"Grading for Mixed Delivery: Cinema, Home, and Every Screen in Between" by Cullen Kelly
https://blog.frame.io/2019/10/14/gradin ... -delivery/"How to Deal with Levels: Full vs. Video" by Dan Swierenga
https://www.thepostprocess.com/2019/09/ ... l-vs-videoand
"A Deeper Look at Consistent Color with QuickTime Tags From Resolve To YouTube & Vimeo on Wide Gamut Apple Monitors" by Dan Swierenga
https://www.thepostprocess.com/2020/07/ ... ktime-tagsand I think they cover the issues and the solutions very well. Understanding color management is also helpful:
"Color Management for Video Editors"
https://jonnyelwyn.co.uk/film-and-video ... o-editors/My simple method: always export a second or two of SMPTE color bars at the very head of the project, and then check them on scopes in whatever player you're using to see how it looks. If there's a shift (video level or hue or chroma), you'll see it very quickly in bars.
Note that the same image will look different on different browsers, different operating systems, different laptops, and different desktop displays. It's even worse when the displays are not calibrated. Sound has similar issues.
We loan our client a (somewhat-) calibrated iPad Pro set to Apple's so-called "reference Rec709/BT1886" levels, and guarantee the project will look good on that and the calibrated displays in our room. Beyond that... it's a crapshoot. It won't look or sound like that anywhere else, which is the nature of delivery. This is all specified in our client contract.