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Shooting GoPro in Log (Flat) Mode: A Complete Guide for Snow Sports

Shooting GoPro in Log (Flat) Mode: A Complete Guide for Snow Sports

Log mode on a GoPro gives your footage more room to breathe in post — wider dynamic range, more recoverable shadows and highlights. On snow, where blown-out whites are the #1 footage killer, that extra range can save an entire run. Here’s what it actually does and how to use it.

GoPro flat log footage on snow
Log mode footage looks washed out — that’s the point. It grades beautifully.

What Log Mode Does (in Plain English)

Log is a flat, low-contrast picture profile. The camera records a wider range of light information by not committing to a final look in-camera. Your footage will look gray and lifeless straight off the card — that’s correct. You apply a color grade in post to bring it to life, and because more data was captured, you have far more control over the final result.

Why Snow Footage Needs It

Snow reflects sunlight at extreme intensity. Standard modes try to auto-expose and clip the highlights, leaving you with white blobs where the texture of the snow should be. Log mode preserves those highlights so the snow looks like actual snow — with depth, texture, and shadow — instead of a blown-out white mess. It also handles the dark shadows under trees and in halfpipes far better than any standard profile.

How to Enable It in 30 Seconds

On the Hero 13: tap the exposure icon → Color → select GP-Log. That’s it. Dial your ISO max to 800 and let the camera work. You’ll want to watch your histogram if your camera shows one — keep highlights just below the right edge. Log clips look wrong on the monitor but grade right in post.

DaVinci Resolve color grading GoPro log footage
Log footage needs a LUT or manual grade — it doesn’t look good raw.

ND Filters: Required Pairing

Log mode requires proper exposure to work. Without an best ND filters for GoPro on a sunny snow day, you’ll overexpose the log profile and lose the highlights you were trying to save. Pair GP-Log with an ND16 on a standard ski day, ND32 on a bright bluebird. Correct shutter speed (2x your GoPro frame rates and resolutions for ski edits) is mandatory — don’t skip this step.

GoPro log footage before and after color grade
Before and after: log footage graded in DaVinci Resolve.

Grade It in DaVinci Resolve

Download GoPro’s free GP-Log LUT from gopro.com/update. Drop it onto your log clip in DaVinci Resolve’s Color page as a 3D LUT node. From there, push your shadows, pull highlights, and add contrast until it looks cinematic. DaVinci Resolve Free handles this pipeline with no paid license needed — it’s the right tool, and it’s free. Log mode plus Resolve is the cheapest upgrade you can make to your ski footage.

If you’re comparing cameras with log support, the Insta360 Ace Pro 2 shoots its own log profile that works in the same DaVinci Resolve pipeline — worth considering if you’re still in the research phase before committing to a camera body.

Written by
CR
CR is a longtime ski industry professional who spent years driving results inside Fortune 500 companies across technology, marketing, and corporate training before turning that expertise toward the mountain. Now focused on the intersection of ski resort operations and AI, CR builds proprietary tools and frameworks that help resorts identify inefficiencies, unlock new revenue, and create real leverage — without the overhead of traditional agencies or consultants.

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