Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
Gadgets & Lifestyle for Everyone
Gadgets & Lifestyle for Everyone
This DJI Osmo Pocket 4 color grading guide teaches you how to transform flat D‑Log footage into vibrant, broadcast‑ready video. The Pocket 4 records 10‑bit D‑Log, a professional logarithmic profile that preserves up to 14 stops of dynamic range. However, this footage looks desaturated and low‑contrast straight out of the camera.
Understanding color grading unlocks the full potential of your Pocket 4. By the end of this guide, you will know how to apply LUTs (Look Up Tables), manually correct exposure and white balance, match footage with other DJI cameras, and grade for different genres.
(For an overview of the camera’s capabilities, see our DJI Osmo Pocket 4 pillar guide.)
Before grading, you must understand why D‑Log is worth the extra effort. Below are the key advantages.
| Aspect | Normal (Rec.709) | 10‑bit D‑Log |
|---|---|---|
| Dynamic range | ~10 stops | 14 stops |
| Highlight recovery | Minimal | Excellent |
| Shadow detail | Crushed | Preserved |
| Color grading flexibility | Low | Very high |
| File size | Smaller | Slightly larger (10‑bit) |
| Straight‑to‑social | Yes | No (requires grading) |
D‑Log records more information in bright skies and dark shadows. Consequently, you can recover blown‑out clouds or lift underexposed faces in post. Normal mode cannot do this.
(For settings to enable D‑Log, see our DJI Osmo Pocket 4 settings guide.)
You can grade Pocket 4 footage in several applications. Here are the recommended options.
| Software | Best For | Cost | LUT Support |
|---|---|---|---|
| DJI Mimo app | Quick adjustments on phone | Free | Basic |
| DaVinci Resolve | Professional grading | Free (Studio paid) | Full |
| Adobe Premiere Pro | Editing + grading | Subscription | Full |
| Final Cut Pro | Mac users | Paid | Full |
| CapCut | Social media quick grades | Free | Limited |
Essential LUTs for Pocket 4:
(For file management and transferring footage, see our DJI Osmo Pocket 4 file management guide.)
DaVinci Resolve is the industry standard for color grading. Its free version is remarkably powerful. Follow these steps carefully.
Open DaVinci Resolve and create a new project. Go to the Media page, then drag your Pocket 4 D‑Log clips into the media pool. Switch to the Edit page and drag the clips onto your timeline.
Switch to the Color page and select your clip. Open the LUT browser (top left, grid icon). Right‑click and choose “Browse LUTs.” Navigate to the DJI LUT file and apply it. Your clip will now have normal contrast and saturation.
After applying the LUT, fine‑tune using the Primaries wheels. Use the Lift control (shadows) to open dark areas slightly (+0 to +0.05). Adjust Gamma (midtones) to brighten skin tones (+0.02 to +0.08). Reduce Gain (highlights) to recover skies (-0.02 to -0.10). Finally, add a touch of contrast (1.05 to 1.10) for extra pop.
Tip: Use the waveform monitor (View > Scopes > Waveform) to check exposure. Ideally, skin tones should sit around 50‑60 IRE.
Use the white balance eyedropper on a neutral gray or white object in the frame. Alternatively, adjust Temp and Tint manually. For creative looks, warm up (yellow) for sunsets or cool down (blue) for winter scenes.
Use the HSL qualifier to select specific colors (e.g., make the sky bluer or grass greener). Then adjust hue, saturation, and luminance.
(For more advanced techniques, continue reading this guide.)
LUTs are mathematical transforms that map one color to another. They save time and ensure consistency.
| Software | Method |
|---|---|
| DaVinci Resolve | Color page > LUT browser > drag onto clip |
| Premiere Pro | Lumetri Color panel > Basic Correction > Input LUT |
| Final Cut Pro | Effects > Color > Custom LUT |
| DJI Mimo app | Edit > LUTs (limited selection) |
Grade a clip to your desired look in DaVinci Resolve. Right‑click on the timeline and select “Generate LUT (Cube).” Save the .cube file. Apply this LUT to other clips for consistent branding.
Use case: A travel vlogger creates a warm, teal‑and‑orange LUT. Every video then has the same signature look.
(For exporting and sharing graded footage, see our DJI Osmo Pocket 4 file management guide.)
The Pocket 4’s 10‑bit D‑Log is the same log profile used on the DJI Ronin 4D and Inspire 3. Therefore, matching footage is straightforward.
Workflow for multi‑camera matching:
Result: Footage from Pocket 4, Ronin 4D, and Inspire 3 looks identical. This is impossible with the Pocket 3’s D‑Log M.
(For a comparison of log profiles, see our DJI Osmo Pocket 4 vs Pocket 3 comparison.)
Scenario A – Travel Vlogger (Consistent Branding)
You shoot a multi‑day trip in varying lighting: bright sun, overcast, golden hour, and night. First, shoot all footage in 10‑bit D‑Log. Then create a custom LUT with your signature teal‑and‑orange look. Apply this LUT to every clip in post. Consequently, the entire video has a consistent, professional appearance despite changing conditions.
Scenario B – Wedding Filmmaker (Multi‑Camera)
You film a wedding with two Pocket 4 cameras and a Ronin 4D. All three shoot in D‑Log. In post, apply the DJI official LUT to all clips. Then use DaVinci Resolve’s Color Match tool with a color checker card. As a result, footage from all three cameras matches perfectly. The final film looks seamless.
Scenario C – Social Media Creator (Quick Turnaround)
You need to post a clip within 30 minutes. You shot in D‑Log. Import the clip into the DJI Mimo app on your phone. Apply the built‑in Rec.709 LUT. Then adjust exposure and saturation slightly. Export and upload. You saved time without sacrificing quality.
Mistake #1: Applying a LUT and doing nothing else. LUTs are starting points, not finishing grades. Always adjust exposure, contrast, and saturation afterward.
Mistake #2: Over‑grading (too much saturation or contrast). This looks unnatural. Aim for a subtle, realistic image.
Mistake #3: Forgetting to set correct white balance in camera. Grading can correct minor shifts, but extreme errors (e.g., daylight WB under tungsten) are hard to fix.
Mistake #4: Grading on an uncalibrated monitor. Your edits may look wrong on other screens. Use a calibrated monitor or at least check on multiple devices.
| Genre | Look | Settings |
|---|---|---|
| Travel vlog | Warm, slightly desaturated | Temp +5, Saturation 90% |
| Cinematic narrative | Teal shadows, orange highlights | Split toning (shadows teal, highlights orange) |
| Corporate interview | Clean, neutral, accurate | Temp 5500K, Saturation 100% |
| Music video | High contrast, stylized | Contrast +20, Saturation 120% |
| Real estate | Bright, cool, sharp | Temp 5000K, Contrast +10, Sharpness +15 |
Use these as starting points. Then adjust based on your specific scene.
(For video settings that affect gradeability, see our DJI Osmo Pocket 4 settings guide.)
No. Grade one representative clip, then copy the grade to others in the same lighting. In DaVinci Resolve, use the “Apply Grade” button or copy/paste.
Yes. HLG is designed for HDR displays. Use DaVinci Resolve’s HDR grading tools. However, for most online platforms (YouTube, Instagram), Rec.709 is sufficient.
Your computer monitor may not be calibrated. Additionally, different screens have different color gamuts. For social media, check your grade on a phone before final export.
Not strictly. Normal mode looks fine. However, 10‑bit D‑Log gives you flexibility to correct exposure errors and create a unique look that stands out.
This DJI Osmo Pocket 4 color grading guide has covered why to shoot D‑Log, the necessary software, step‑by‑step grading in DaVinci Resolve, using LUTs, matching multi‑camera footage, and avoiding common mistakes. Start by applying the DJI official LUT. Then adjust exposure, contrast, and white balance. For consistent branding, create your own LUT.
With these skills, your Pocket 4 footage will look cinematic and professional. The extra effort of grading is well worth the result.
Next steps: Explore real‑world examples in our DJI Osmo Pocket 4 real‑world review. For settings that optimize gradeability, see our DJI Osmo Pocket 4 settings guide. For file management of large log files, see our DJI Osmo Pocket 4 file management guide.