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AI Video Colorgrade

Pick a grade style, set the intensity, and the AI reworks the color profile of every frame. Teal & orange, vintage, film noir, warm, cool, desaturated, and high-contrast are all available in one step.

Drop your video here

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MP4, MOV, AVI, WebM (max 100MB)
CinemaLook
AIPowered
~60sProcessing

How It Works

  1. Upload your video
  2. AI applies cinematic color grading
  3. Download enhanced video

Tips for Best Results

  • Raw or flat footage grades best
  • Keep under 2 minutes
  • MP4 recommended

Also Try

Why Choose Our Video Color Grading

8 Distinct Grade Styles

Choose between Cinematic, Teal & Orange, Vintage, Film Noir, Warm Tones, Cool Tones, Desaturated, and High Contrast. Each is a distinct color treatment, not a simple tint.

Adjustable Intensity

Light, medium, or strong intensity controls how aggressively the grade is applied. A light Teal & Orange treatment is quite different from a strong one, so you can dial in subtlety or boldness.

Temporal Consistency

The grade stays consistent across cuts and scene changes. The AI processes each frame relative to the overall footage so colors do not drift or flicker between shots.

No Calibration Needed

You do not need to understand color wheels, lift/gamma/gain, or LUT files. Select the look and intensity, and the AI handles all the tonal adjustments automatically.

Perfect For

Short Films YouTube Videos Social Media Content Music Videos Corporate Videos Wedding Films Vlogs Advertisements

Powered by AI Color Science

AI Color Science

The grading engine reads the luminance and chrominance data of each frame and maps it to the target color look. Rather than applying a flat overlay, it adjusts highlights, midtones, and shadows as separate tonal zones so skies shift without crushing faces and skin tones stay recognizable.

Intensity is implemented as a blend factor between the original and fully graded versions of each frame. A light setting keeps most of your original color and adds just enough of the target look to change the mood without overpowering the source footage.

Frequently Asked Questions

Each style is a distinct color treatment. Cinematic shifts toward a broad, neutral filmic look. Teal & Orange pushes skin tones warm and shadows cyan, which is a common Hollywood blockbuster treatment. Film Noir removes most color saturation and boosts contrast heavily. Vintage adds a faded, slightly warm lift to the shadows. Warm Tones and Cool Tones shift the overall palette toward amber or blue respectively. Desaturated strips most color, and High Contrast increases the difference between bright and dark areas.

MP4, MOV, AVI, and WebM files are all accepted. For the cleanest grade, upload the highest-quality source you have. A heavily compressed clip can still be graded, but compression artifacts become more visible when contrast or saturation is pushed at strong intensity.

Files up to 100 MB are accepted. Longer or larger files take more processing time. If you are grading a full-length project, splitting it into scenes and processing each is also a practical way to apply slightly different intensity levels to different parts of the video.

Processing time scales with clip length and resolution. Short clips at 1080p typically complete in a few minutes. A progress indicator tracks the job while it runs.

Uploaded footage is used only to run your color grading job. It is not shared with third parties or used to train models. Both the source and the graded output remain your property.

No. The output resolution and frame rate match your source file. Only the color data changes. The graded video downloads as MP4, ready for editing or direct publication.

Yes. Color grading is a post-processing step on your own footage, so no new rights are created. The graded clip is yours to use in any project, commercial or otherwise.

No. The tool reduces color grading to two decisions: which style and what intensity. You do not need to know what a color wheel or LUT is. If you watch a few seconds of the preview and the grade looks right, you are done.

Yes. The graded video plays in your browser once processing finishes. If the style or intensity does not look right, go back, pick different settings, and reprocess. Each run is a separate job, so your original is never overwritten.

A LUT is a fixed table that maps input colors to output colors the same way regardless of scene content. This AI approach analyzes the actual tonal distribution of your footage before applying the grade, so the result adapts to whether your source is dark, overexposed, or heavily shadowed. The outcome is closer to what a human colorist does when they balance a clip before applying a look.

Free Video Color Grading: Apply Cinematic Looks to Videos Online vs Other Methods

Feature Luxoret AI Manual / Traditional Other Tools
Speed Minutes, not hours Hours of manual editing Varies by complexity
Skill Required None — AI handles it Video editing expertise Moderate learning curve
Software Browser-based, nothing to install Expensive editing suite Desktop app required
Quality AI-enhanced, professional Depends on editor skill Template-dependent
Revisions Instant re-processing Re-edit from scratch Limited by plan