Why film in log mode at all?
Log mode gives you a flatter image, which sounds worse at first, but it gives you more room to edit later. On a GoPro, that means you can recover highlights a little better, keep more detail in bright snow, and build a cleaner final look if you know you’ll color grade the footage.
The upside
- More grading room, especially if the scene has bright sky and shaded snow.
- Better highlight control when you’re filming on bluebird days.
- Cleaner matching if you’re mixing GoPro clips with other cameras.
The downside
- It looks flat and gray straight out of camera.
- You need to color grade it, or it can look lifeless.
- It’s not ideal if you want to shoot, dump, and post fast.
When I’d use it
I’d use log when I’m filming something I care about, like a ski edit, a resort promo, or a clip that needs a little polish. I would not use it for random throwaway clips where speed matters more than quality.
Simple best practices
- Use log only when you plan to grade.
- Lock your exposure as much as possible so the image doesn’t drift.
- Film in good light if you can, because noisy log footage is harder to clean up.
- Keep a consistent color workflow so your edits stay predictable.
My quick take
Log mode is worth it if you want the best-looking GoPro footage and you’re willing to spend a few extra minutes in post. If you want fast and easy, stick with a normal profile. If you want the edit to look more cinematic, log is the better play.



