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Stills from FCPX are high contrast with crushed blacks?

FCPX 11.


If I 'Save Current Frame' from the FCPX timeline -- the still (PNG) I get is not like the image on the timeline: the contrast is jacked up and the blacks are so black they appear to have been crushed.


It didn't used to be like this. I'm wondering what has happened with FCPX, and if there is a way to correct this?


Note. If I pull the mastered film into Quicktime and isolate the same frame and do a Command C, and the 'New From Clipboard' in Preview I get a perfect exact still.

MacBook Pro 16″, macOS 15.1

Posted on Jan 14, 2025 4:04 PM

Reply
39 replies

Jan 18, 2025 7:18 AM in response to BenB

Tom. You were right, Photo Zoom is good. And BenB, you're also right. Topaz and Photo Zoom seem to be on par. Topaz seems a bit more user friendly (to me) ... but that may be because I've been using it awhile. Photo Zoom seems like I'd have to do some tutorials to get efficient with it.


BenB: so in this post there are at least 2 ways to workaround the 'dark' problem. Both easy.


  1. If you want to stay in FCPX and work from the timeline, then as Luis suggests: make a 1 frame Quicktime movie (I just did the highest rez = ProRes 4444 QT). When you Command E to export the 1 frame movie, also set the 'Action' to Quicktime Player. Then you'll click 'Next' and save that 1 frame QT movie, but at the same time the Quicktime Player will open automatically and you can Command C to copy the frame, open Preview, Command N to place the frame from the clipboard to Preview, then Command S to save the frame to a 'stills' folder. The still will be exactly the same as the image on the timeline.


  1. Faster, less clicks: you export a master Quicktime movie from the FCPX timeline. You open that Quicktime movie in the Quicktime Player. You find your still, then (as above) you Command C to copy the frame, open Preview, Command N to place the frame from the clipboard to Preview, then Command S to save the frame to a 'stills' folder. NOTE: if you leave one still open in Preview, then you can Command TAB from Quicktime over to Preview (not needing to open Preview ever time).


Today I've got a couple of hundred stills to pull that way. My fingers are not happy campers.

Jan 15, 2025 11:38 AM in response to Clint Gryke

Hey Clint,



This (below) looked like it was working, but, in fact, didn't. It seemed to work on the first still. But then subsequent stills were still too dark and contrasty. So I will shift over to Affinity Photo and see what I can do there.


_________________________________________________


This looks like it works. Apple Photos > File > Export > then set the 'Color Profile' to 'Most Compatible' ... and export (see attachment below). The end result looks identical to the original on the FCPX timeline. And ... I can pull all my already created stills (100 plus) right into Apple Photos, and export them all back out with the correct Profile (at least to the eye) in one instance.


I'll also check Affinity Photo (which is closer to Photoshop), to see if it will allow a more specific Color Profile change.


And report back. But meanwhile, this seems to work. Thank you most kindly for your help, super appreciated!


Ben



Jan 14, 2025 5:19 PM in response to terryb

I see it's an operating system issue.


So my solution will have to work for me: I made a 'master' of the film, pulled the master ProRes HQ into Quicktime, and am copying frames from Quicktime and making stills with Preview. A bit more complicated. But the end result is perfect.


Ha ha ha ... dumb me ... I did almost a hundred stills with FCPX before I actually looked at the results. My bad.


Thank you kindly for the link terryb!


Ben

Jan 15, 2025 3:26 AM in response to Ben Low

The issue here is about the colour profile that FCP tags the saved frame with on export. It uses Rec. ITU-R BT.709-5 which is being read incorrectly by several apps including Preview and FCP (if reimported). 


It might be too late if you have already done as you describe in QuickTime. However, if you have already saved the frames as stills and you have Lightroom and and are familiar with using it, you can simply import the saved stills and re-export them with a Rec709 Gamma 2.4 tag. This can be done using a simple export preset so the process is completely automated. This will give images that look identical to the way they looked in the FCP timeline when exported. It can also be done in Photoshop and it can even be automated if one is familiar with Photoshop actions but it is much easier to automate the process using Lightroom. When talking about Lightroom, I am referring to Lightroom Classic (the desktop version of Lightroom).


In my opinion this is a much better temporary fix than copying and pasting or using screenshots as it can be easily automated and it enables a tight colour management workflow.


Jan 15, 2025 3:03 PM in response to Clint Gryke

Affinity doesn't give the Rec709G2.4 option. I used Photoshop for years. When Adobe went into subscriptions I lost interest. I make films. I love FCPX. The usual work I need to do with and on stills I can usually do with Photos or Pixelmator Pro (which also doesn't have the Rec709G2.4 option) ... and I can access Pixelmator or Affinity Photo directly from Photos ... and no subscription required.


I can see I might spend a day or two with no guarantee of success trying to recover my 100 photos. I can just redo them in an hour or so: I open the mastered movie in Quicktime, Command C a still where I want one; the open Preview and Command N to move my still from the clipboard to Preview; then output Command S the result ... and it's identical to the mastered film, which is identical to the clip(s) on the FCPX timeline.


Thank you most kindly for your help Clint! If I stumble across any other solution I'll report it in this post. It would be nice to go directly from the timeline ... often the stills are required before the film is completed. Maybe Apple will fix the bug ...

Jan 16, 2025 6:47 AM in response to Ben Low



Ben Low wrote:

Thank you most kindly for your help Clint! If I stumble across any other solution I'll report it in this post. It would be nice to go directly from the timeline ... often the stills are required before the film is completed. Maybe Apple will fix the bug ...



No worries Ben. Hopefully you will find a solution. I think this method is the easiest workaround for anyone with Lightroom or Photoshop so maybe it will help others anyway.


Jan 16, 2025 8:36 AM in response to Ben Low

The FREE version of DaVinci Resolve exports still frames accurately, so you could edit your videos in Resolve or . . .


. . . just send your timeline from FCP to Resolve via XML and create the stills using Resolve.


It takes seconds to send your timeline to Resolve using XML and creating the stills (File/Export/Current Frame as Still) will be at least as quick as FCP.


Problem solved!

Jan 16, 2025 8:49 AM in response to Ian R. Brown

Fantabulous Ian. Good idea. I used to use Resolve (to colour grade), till I fell in love with FCPX.


The nice thing about working with the timeline is one can isolate the still one wants much quicker, slipping back and forth to find it. In Quicktime the scale is too big, so one actually has to play the movie to get close, then frame back and forth (clumsier).


Will try Resolve today. Thank you for that ...


Ben

Jan 17, 2025 8:04 AM in response to Ben Low

Ben Low wrote:

Fantabulous Ian. Good idea. I used to use Resolve (to colour grade), till I fell in love with FCPX.

The nice thing about working with the timeline is one can isolate the still one wants much quicker, slipping back and forth to find it. In Quicktime the scale is too big, so one actually has to play the movie to get close, then frame back and forth (clumsier).


You seem to have missed that you can export a single frame as a Quicktime movie, so no guessing or searching is involved. Just position the playhead, press I and O to set the range equal to just that frame. You can even set the export so it opens in Quicktime Player automatically. So it can be done in just a couple of seconds, all from the keyboard:

I, O, Command-E, type name, enter,

(file in Quicktime opens automatically)Command-C,

(command-tab to Preview) Command-N, CommandCommand-S

Stills from FCPX are high contrast with crushed blacks?

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