While LUTs provide a quick way to apply cinematic looks, what is a key limitation regarding their application if precise, individual color adjustments are needed for specific elements within a shot?
A Look-Up Table (LUT) is a set of mathematical instructions that transforms color values by directly mapping an input color to a new output color. Its key limitation for precise, individual color adjustments on specific elements within a shot is its *globalapplication. A global application means the LUT applies the exact same, predetermined color transformation uniformly to *every single pixelacross the entire image. Consequently, a LUT cannot discriminate between different objects, areas, or specific color ranges within the shot. If a specific element, such as a character's shirt or a background object, requires a targeted hue shift, saturation boost, or luminance adjustment, applying a LUT alone will affect the entire image indiscriminately, altering all other elements in the frame. It lacks the ability to isolate and modify only a particular element without impacting the rest of the shot, which is necessary for individual, localized color control.