Apple Quietly Acquires Color.io, Hires Solo Creator Behind Popular Grading Tool
Apple Acquires Color.io in Stealth Deal
Apple has purchased Color.io, a widely used web-based color grading tool, through the acquisition of its parent company Patchflyer in January, according to newly disclosed European Union filings. The deal brings solo developer Jonathan Ochmann into Apple's growing roster of creative software talent.

Color.io, which served over 200,000 users, shut down on December 31, 2025, giving its community just five weeks' notice. The closure had been announced by Ochmann in November 2024, who revealed he was joining a company that would let him work at a scale he couldn't achieve alone.
Quote from Jonthan Ochmann
"After 10+ years of running everything alone, I've reached a point where I need to grow in ways that aren't possible as a solo builder," Ochmann wrote in a blog post last year. He did not name Apple at the time, but now the EU disclosure confirms the connection.
Background: What Color.io Brought to the Table
Color.io was known for its intuitive yet powerful approach to adding film-like color and texture to images and video. It relied on a custom color engine and proprietary color models—plus a rich library of tools for fine-tuning hues, saturation, and contrast.
Before creating Color.io, Ochmann also developed the popular VisionColor LUTs, which are widely used by filmmakers and photographers for cinematic color grading. His expertise uniquely combines software engineering with deep color science.

The acquisition comes alongside Apple's purchase of PromptAI, a computer vision startup behind the Seemour app for home security cameras. That deal was already public knowledge.
What This Means
Apple now employs a color grading expert with a proven track record in creating accessible, professional-grade tools. Ochmann's skills could significantly enhance Apple's creative suite—especially Final Cut Pro for video editors and Pixelmator Pro for still image workflows.
Color.io's cloud-based architecture also hints at potential integration with Apple's ecosystem, possibly bringing real-time collaboration or AI-assisted grading to these apps. While Apple has not commented on future plans, the acquisition signals a serious investment in pro-grade color tools.
For former Color.io users, the tool's disappearance leaves a gap, but the promise of Apple-scale resources may lead to something even more capable down the line.
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