I also love the color tools in Nuke. Feel hamstrung in any other app. the 
director was very impressed by what I could do in Nuke. However, I just 
finished grading a (very) short movie in Nuke studio, and wish working on its 
timeline was a nicer experiance. 

I am always trying to convince my students to learn selective color in PS. The 
only hue tool they ever try in color adjustment, which I can't abide.  I show 
them my trusty copy of PS 1 (in emulation mode) and explain to them that color 
adjustment has been there since version one. Apparently one reason why it was 
included was that it was easy for the engineers to implement.


Sent from my iPhone

> On 30 Mar 2017, at 9:18 PM, motion artist <motionarti...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> I'm a colourist rather than a compositor. And I really like how selective 
> colour works on skintones in photoshop and I would like to be able to do the 
> same in Resolve. I think that the effect of selective colour on skintones and 
> particularly the cyan slider in the red is much nicer than the hue vs hue 
> curves in resolve or hue correct in nuke. I understand that you could 
> probably get the same results with a bit of wiggling around but i also find 
> it interesting to udnerstand how these things work. 
> 
> I do find reverse engineering things like this easier in Nuke first because 
> the toolset is much broader than resolve. Will the try to apply it in 
> resolve. This all might sound a little bit backwards but it work for me so 
> far.
> 
> All the best
> 
> Stepan
> 
>> On Thu, Mar 30, 2017 at 1:27 PM, Martin Constable <jackyoungbl...@me.com> 
>> wrote:
>> Am a matter of interest, why do you want this?
>> 
>> I am a fan of Selective Color in PS as well. It is the only decent Hue tool 
>> in PS. However… in Nuke we have the great Hue Correct, which, as far as I 
>> can see, does a better job of the same task.
>> 
>> 
>> Martin Constable
>> 
>> 
>> > On 30 Mar 2017, at 6:29 PM, motion artist <motionarti...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> >
>> > Hello
>> >
>> > I was wondering if anyone has tried rebuilding the selective color 
>> > operator in photoshop inside of nuke? Or maybe there are gizmos that are 
>> > working in the same way? A quick google search doesn't seem to give much 
>> > result in terms of the actual technicalities of how that operator works.
>> >
>> > Thanks for the help!
>> >
>> > Stepan
>> >
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