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Outline of Duties: Colorist

Preface

Colorist is a standalone profession. The colorist creates looks in collaboration with the DOP and applies them using the appropriate tools in color grading. She or he serves as the central contact for the DOP, director, VFX and production operatives and facilitates efficient communication and a common color language.
Colorists are specialists in color design and the manipulation of motion pictures in post-production. They have up-to-date knowledge in the fields of creative and technical image manipulation and a sense for color trends and styles, both current and historic. They can connect with storylines and have a sense for dramaturgy. They also know about film production workflows and the processes of the departments involved, e.g. production design, costume and makeup.
The term “color grading” describes the process of color image manipulation of moving images. Colors, their hue and brightness, as well as image contrast can be altered in great detail for the whole image or selected parts in order to create a consistent, creative look for the whole motion picture. Different cameras and aspect ratios can be matched and issues during shooting, like changing weather conditions or different white balances can be solved or smoothed out.
Other common but partly incorrect terms for color grading are, color correction, color matching, digital intermediate (DI) and color timing. The term color timing exclusively describes adjusting the printer light settings in the analog film lab process, which is conducted by color timers.

Duties of colorists

Colorists follow a film production usually for the whole period of production. They evaluate and work on the images in collaboration with the DOP to enable the highest possible quality for the final product, following creative decisions and the visual concept. This requires basic theoretical and practical knowledge in following areas:



Field of activities of colorists

Sorted in production phases of preproduction, shooting and post-production.

Preproduction Shooting Post-production
The actual scope of activities may vary depending on the kind of production, i.e. commercials, documentaries, episodics or features. Colorists may work in fixed employment, project-related employment or as freelancers.

Date: 2017-11-02
Authors: Rainer Bültert BVK, Fabiana Cardalda BVK, Felix Hüsken BVK, Dirk Meier BVK