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Xmp To Cube Converter Online [PROVEN — 2025]

Photoshop uses CUBE files (via “Color Lookup”), but Lightroom uses XMP. If you want to apply a Lightroom preset to a batch of images within Photoshop Actions, you first convert the XMP to CUBE.

Note: A standard photo preset cannot be directly read by a LUT converter because the "sliders" are vague. To convert XMP to CUBE, the tool needs to "burn in" the look.

Ideally, the tool requires an Input Image (a color chart or a standard photo) and the XMP Preset. The tool applies the preset to the photo to see what the sliders do, then exports that change as a 3D LUT. xmp to cube converter online

Before you hit "convert," it is important to understand what these files actually do.

| Problem | Likely Cause | Solution | |--------|------------|----------| | The CUBE looks different from Lightroom | XMP includes local adjustments or camera-specific calibration | Create a global-only preset in Lightroom before exporting XMP | | Banding in gradients | Cube size too small (17-point) | Reconvert using 33-point or 65-point | | Output is completely black | XMP contains a curve that clips all values | Reduce contrast in the original preset, reconvert | | Online converter fails to load XMP | XMP is from a newer Lightroom version | Save the preset as “Legacy XMP” (Lightroom Preferences) | Photoshop uses CUBE files (via “Color Lookup”), but

XMP, developed by Adobe, is a metadata standard used primarily in Adobe Lightroom, Camera Raw, and Photoshop. When you edit a raw photo—adjusting exposure, contrast, saturation, or tone curves—Lightroom saves those instructions as an XMP “sidecar” file or embeds them directly into compatible formats (DNG).

Key Characteristics of XMP:

Common Use Cases:

You created a stunning preset in Lightroom for a portrait. Now, you want to apply the exact same look to a video clip in DaVinci Resolve. There is no direct import of XMP into video software. An online converter mathematically samples the XMP’s tone curve, color mix, and saturation to generate a CUBE file that approximates the look. Common Use Cases: You created a stunning preset