Freepik launches Relight with reference-based control over direction, intensity and color
Freepik launched Relight in Pikaso, letting creators transfer lighting from a reference and adjust direction, intensity and color for images and video. Browser-based relighting is moving from rough correction into controllable look development, so test it for production lighting passes.

TL;DR
- Freepik has launched Relight inside Pikaso, adding browser-based relighting for both still images and video, according to Freepik's launch post.
- The core controls are explicit: creators can change light direction, intensity, and color, and Freepik's launch post says they can also transfer lighting from a reference image.
- Freepik's tool page positions Relight as a browser workflow rather than a traditional grading pass, with presets available as starting points before manual adjustment.
- The demo in Freepik's example clip shows the light source moving across a portrait and reshaping highlights and shadows, which suggests the tool is aimed at look development, not just basic correction.
What shipped
Relight is a new Freepik tool for images and videos that brings lighting control into the browser. Freepik says creators can steer direction, intensity, and color, import lighting from a reference, and start from expert presets before refining the result in Pikaso via the tool page.
That matters because the feature set is framed as shot styling, not a one-click fixer. Instead of only brightening dark footage, Relight is being presented as a way to move the apparent light source and rebuild the look of a scene.
How the controls look in practice
Freepik's short demo shows the clearest use case: a portrait stays fixed while a virtual light moves around the subject's face, changing the shadow falloff and highlight placement in real time. The launch video in the product demo also cycles through direction, intensity, and color adjustments for both image and video outputs, reinforcing that the same control surface is meant to cover stills and motion.
For creatives, the interesting shift is precision. Reference-based transfer plus manual sliders gives Relight a role closer to a lighting pass or mood pass than a generic enhancement filter.