Monitor Differences
pemmett
Registered Users Posts: 507 Major grins
Does anyone have a good solution to ensuring that the image you see in your monitor is going to look the same in other peoples monitors?
My last image looked fine on one monitor and slightly underdone on another, but I've ad a few comments of it being slightly overdone from others.
Any help or suggestions?
Thanks/Peter
My last image looked fine on one monitor and slightly underdone on another, but I've ad a few comments of it being slightly overdone from others.
Any help or suggestions?
Thanks/Peter
0
Comments
nope. not unless you use a monitor calibrator and know that everyone that is viewing your photo used the same calibrator and in the same way. That's my opinion anyways. I have some other artists' works in my galleries and I get that complaint all the time. I calibrated my monitor, but even then, I think it's far from perfect.
Tessa
www.tessa-hd.smugmug.com
www.printandportfolio.com
This summer's wilderness photography project: www.tessa-hd.smugmug.com/gallery/3172341
You may alreay have something called Adobe gamma installed on your computer, which does calibrating. But there are other products out there that you can purchase which do a better job. And, that's precisely what that thread covers.
http://lrichters.smugmug.com
There is no solution.
There might be a solution if you had not said "other peoples monitors." For example, you can calibrate every monitor in your home or studio to be as perfect as possible, and a photo might look reasonably identical across all your own monitors. But when the photo is viewed by all your friends and relatives, there is just no practical way to ensure that all of their monitors are calibrated to spec. Half of them won't even know what you're talking about, and a fair number of their monitors are probably unknowingly set to brightness, contrast, and white point values that are nowhere near optimal. It's a mess out there.
Oh well, at least I've learned about being able to callibrate my monitor to my printer
Thanks/Peter
My images | My blog | My free course
It starts with Brightness & Contrast and then set Gamma.
The test image in this link is one of the best I've found for helping balance Brightness & Contrast correctly.
http://forums.dpreview.com/forums/read.asp?forum=1006&message=22835742
I use this site for "eye balling" gamma after using Samsung's Gamma setter...
http://www.photoscientia.co.uk/Gamma.htm#menu
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