ShutterColor tutorial
Learn how to edit a shoot with ShutterColor.
Watch the walkthrough to see how to upload a shoot, edit your first image, save corrections, and let ShutterColor start learning your style across the rest of the gallery.
Built for photographers who want faster turnaround without giving up review, control, or their own editing style.
What the video covers
A simple walkthrough for your first shoot.
This page is meant to be the public tutorial hub for people who are new to ShutterColor. Keep the copy short, let the video do most of the teaching, and give users clear next steps after watching.
Create a project
Start a new shoot or batch so the system can keep the edits, style memory, and photos grouped together.
Upload images
Add the photos you want to work through. This can be a real event, portrait session, graduation shoot, or wedding preview.
Edit the first photos
Make your normal exposure, color, skin tone, subject, background, and color mixer adjustments.
Save style memory
Each saved correction helps ShutterColor learn how this shoot should look instead of applying a generic preset.
Apply AI suggestions
Let ShutterColor create faster first-pass edits while you continue reviewing and adjusting the final look.
Finish with control
Approve, adjust, and finish the gallery yourself so the AI assists your workflow without replacing your judgment.
Why this matters
The goal is not to remove the photographer. It is to remove repeated corrections.
ShutterColor is designed for the part of editing where you keep making the same decisions over and over: warming skin, controlling greens, balancing exposure, separating the subject, and keeping the shoot consistent.
Good first tutorial topics
How to upload a shoot or batch.
How to edit the first image manually.
How ShutterColor learns from saved corrections.
How global, skin tone, subject, and background edits differ.
How to review AI-assisted edits before final delivery.
Ready to try the workflow?
Upload a shoot, edit your way, and let ShutterColor start learning from your corrections.
Watch the tutorial first, then create an account and test the workflow on a real gallery where repeated edits slow you down.