If you seek accurate color reprodution in your work and ready to build your work process using ICC color management, but you can’t spend money for mainstream industry devices, I recommend you to by old, but tested and reasonably bundled i1Pro Rev.D spectrophotometer on Ebay. Finaly you should know that displays with different panel lighting are actualy different viewing conditions, so their calibration can give different color sense when they stand vis-a-vis. Printing does not allow to reproduce all display-related colors for physical reasons, but it can reproduce some dense colors, that is why screen proofing using printer ICC is recommended here and AdobeRGB coverage is needed for press design. For images in the Internet sRGB profile is highly recommended, cause only iMacs, Macbooks Pro and a few more expensive monitors cover other standarts (smartphone displays can cover, but profile emulation is not used in “vivid” screen mode). Some ICC profile has its color gamut limits (colors coverage) and it is recommended to use standard profiles for images, while displays and printers profiles are always device-related and should cover some standards. If conditions change in reasonable range, all image colors, except of some most saturated, can be repproduced under new conditions and their RGB coordinates will differ now from originals. ICC profiles interpret RGB (or CMYK, or other) color coordinates as strictly defined color for human eyes under some viewing conditions (falling light spectrum, lighntness level, image holder type and some others), this is not color spectrum reproduction itself. Images must be paired with ICC profiles to make their accurate reproduction possible. This reply was modified 1 year, 5 months ago by Vincent.Īnkit, you have to know color management essentials: Most people lack of such high quality light source for printed copies and D65 white on screen usually is not a good match for such light sources, it need to be warmer (and you can calibrate your screen to that warmer whitepoint) with the same light intensity as screen ( lux divided by pi on paper= aprox cd/m2 in screen) with the same color in light source as screen white (or same screen white as light source) that printed copy will be under some good spectral power distribution light source With that informatioon (printer/lab ICC profile) you can use softproof (Photoshop, LR, C1.) to preview how images will look on a calibrated screen BUT that preview assumes/requires Let’s assume that you send images to a print lab with proper color management or that you hire a service for profilling your printer, so for a combination of paper and inks you have an accurate ICC with printer or pronter lab behavior. Most android amoleds have it (but you cannot modify gamut boundaries manually, only use those smaler gamut preset) and maybe ios devices have color management (I do not use them so IDNK)Īlso “Display Pro Plus” will be good enough for printing accurate images too ? Unless smartphone has some sRGB/Rec709 emulation mode images will look oversaturated. That is whitepoint, not gamut boundaries. This reply was modified 1 year, 5 months ago by Thank you for your response. This reply was modified 1 year, 5 months ago by Ankit. Thats the seriousness part you asked for & my skills just tend to evolve day by day.įor printing i just want close possible color acurracy to the screen but not very critical for printing casual images…… So thought of diving into screen calibration. But since i noticed my edits don’t look as i want on different screens i look at. Untill now i have been editing on uncalibrated screens (my laptop & my smartphone). I don’t have any good camera right now, so i am mostly into animation studd for the moment. I am a totally a solo content creator as i do everything from music creation process from scratch to static images creation to final video production for it to the end. As i am mainly an avid music creator & usually have criticality for only sound atm. Since my eyes are very critical of small differences like my ears. Although it has an automatic X-Reality Engine mode which says to make colors look more natural but don’t know its accurate or not since i am new to calibrated version of any display so don’t know how a calibrated display even looks.įor TV i just want it to br calibrated for viewing pleasure (which a 4k HDR maybe an OLED we might be buying in near future). I have Sony Xperia X, which just has manual setting for red, blue & green but nothing more fancy.
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