- #BLACKMAGIC DESKTOP VIDEO MAC DISPLAY SETTINGS MAC OS#
- #BLACKMAGIC DESKTOP VIDEO MAC DISPLAY SETTINGS INSTALL#
- #BLACKMAGIC DESKTOP VIDEO MAC DISPLAY SETTINGS UPDATE#
- #BLACKMAGIC DESKTOP VIDEO MAC DISPLAY SETTINGS PRO#
When you must use lut table in your display (not in video card) + video output card. There's a classic color correction for video workflow. Was this option removed? I cannot find it anywhere, I have looked in the preferences and project settings, either I've gone blind or it aint here anymore. You have to have a color-managed output, like one from a Blackmagic display card, preferably on a calibrated external Rec709 display. 2039-2040 of the Resolve 16 manual: "Limitations When Grading With the Viewer on a Computer Display." This goes into some detail why you cannot accurately monitor directly from the computer and operating system. But if you're going to edit, heed by what it says on pp. I think it's fine just to just learn or play around on a laptop screen, and I also think it's fine for editing. This is why calibration and a color-managed output are important. You may not be looking at anything even remotely resembling reality. It's just some random setting that Apple set at the factory, plus 6 years of use and drift on top of that. It's not Rec709, and I tend to doubt it's even sRGB. I think you are going to go off the cliff if you assume you can color correct off the laptop screen. It's an older (2013) model with an sRGB/REC 709 color gamut screen. And if I recall, at least from Resolve 12 or 14, checking this box also effected the scopes which is not good at all.īruce alan greene wrote:I have a MBP laptop that I sometimes use with Resolve. I think there maybe something wrong with the implementation of this "feature". It's as if I've double corrected the display when using this checkbox.
Unchecking this box plays back the video correctly.
But the reality is that checking this creates a poor, incorrect color playback in Resolve.
#BLACKMAGIC DESKTOP VIDEO MAC DISPLAY SETTINGS PRO#
I've profiled/calibrated my screen with an iOne Display Pro and I expected that I would see a reasonably correct image when using "Use Mac display profile" checked. I have a MBP laptop that I sometimes use with Resolve.
#BLACKMAGIC DESKTOP VIDEO MAC DISPLAY SETTINGS MAC OS#
New Blackmagic eGPU 1.2 Update! Get support for the new Apple Pro Display XDR when used with Blackmagic eGPU and eGPU Pro on a Mac with Thunderbolt 3.Peter Cave wrote:Works ok to get a reasonable match between the Resolve viewers & a grading monitor but should be turned off if not using a monitor controlled by the Mac OS Colorsync settings.Yes of course, this was obvious to me.Īnyway, after different tests, I leave it ticked (on) now, but my CM is always adapted to the current project as well.
#BLACKMAGIC DESKTOP VIDEO MAC DISPLAY SETTINGS INSTALL#
To take advantage of Pro Display XDR support (at least officially), customers will need to install the Blackmagic 1.2 update.Įven though Apple has a limited list of Macs that are officially compatible with the Pro Display XDR, we’ve seen hardware not on the list like the iMac Pro, MacBook, and iPad Pro still work, just at lower than 6K resolutions (and possible reduced performance).ĩto5Mac’s Jeff Benjamin has done in-depth reviews on both Blackmagic eGPUs.
#BLACKMAGIC DESKTOP VIDEO MAC DISPLAY SETTINGS UPDATE#
Blackmagic is out with an update today for both its eGPU and eGPU Pro bringing official support for Apple’s Pro Display XDR to any Mac with Thunderbolt 3.įor now, Blackmagic’s eGPU and eGPU Pro are the only two options to bring official support for Apple’s Pro Display XDR to Mac’s with Thunderbolt 3 that don’t natively officially support the 32-inch professional display.