How do you verify color grading on different devices?

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Multiple Choice

How do you verify color grading on different devices?

Explanation:
Cross-device color verification is about ensuring your grade looks right on the devices your audience will use, not just on your own monitor. To do this effectively, render a test export and view it on the target devices, then use the built-in Scopes in Resolve to measure and compare the color and luminance values across devices. Rendering a test clip creates a faithful representation of the final delivery pipeline, including encoding, color space conversion, and display response. Viewing it on multiple screens reveals how exposure, contrast, and color balance shift across TVs, phones, and computer monitors, which helps you adjust so skin tones stay natural and saturation remains controlled. Scopes—Waveform for luminance and RGB balance, Vector Scope for hue and saturation, and the Parade as a reference—give objective feedback about whether the grade stays within intended ranges across the entire image, making it easier to spot discrepancies that a single calibrated monitor might mask. Relying only on monitor calibration can still hide how content will actually look on other devices, and using just the histogram or a single device won't reveal color shifts or gamma differences across displays. By combining a test export with Scope analysis on multiple displays, you get a practical, reliable check of how your color grade will travel to viewers.

Cross-device color verification is about ensuring your grade looks right on the devices your audience will use, not just on your own monitor. To do this effectively, render a test export and view it on the target devices, then use the built-in Scopes in Resolve to measure and compare the color and luminance values across devices. Rendering a test clip creates a faithful representation of the final delivery pipeline, including encoding, color space conversion, and display response. Viewing it on multiple screens reveals how exposure, contrast, and color balance shift across TVs, phones, and computer monitors, which helps you adjust so skin tones stay natural and saturation remains controlled. Scopes—Waveform for luminance and RGB balance, Vector Scope for hue and saturation, and the Parade as a reference—give objective feedback about whether the grade stays within intended ranges across the entire image, making it easier to spot discrepancies that a single calibrated monitor might mask. Relying only on monitor calibration can still hide how content will actually look on other devices, and using just the histogram or a single device won't reveal color shifts or gamma differences across displays. By combining a test export with Scope analysis on multiple displays, you get a practical, reliable check of how your color grade will travel to viewers.

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