> I want to understand: CMS profiles versus LUTs, the interaction of the monitors "brightness" settings with calibration, the effects of ambient light, differences between calibrating for video vs. graphics, differences between panel types, limitations of color space.
I actually started working on something like this a while ago. The working title is "Understanding Light, Color, Display Systems and Calibration". I have about 50 pages completed. It's probably a 200+ page project. I've been busy with other projects and progress has been slow. If there's enough interest I could be convinced to move it up the priority list.
-Martin Euredjian
From: "hoplist@hillmanncarr.com [Avid-L2]" <Avid-L2@yahoogroups.com>
To: Avid-L2-yahoogroups.com <Avid-L2@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Sunday, May 25, 2014 8:18 AM
Subject: Re: [Avid-L2] Monitor calibration
On May 22, 2014, at 9:25 AM, Steve Hullfish steve4lists@veralith.com [Avid-L2] <Avid-L2@yahoogroups.com> wrote:
Yes. You can and should calibrate your computer monitor. I use DataColor Spyder, but also have X-Rite i1Display.
I would love to learn to calibrate non-NTSC monitors. Anyone want to point me towards good resources? I don't mean a simple how-to which is what I've seen so far. I can follow a wizard. I want to understand: CMS profiles versus LUTs, the interaction of the monitors "brightness" settings with calibration, the effects of ambient light, differences between calibrating for video vs. graphics, differences between panel types, limitations of color space.
I promise that Steve's latest book is on my reading list, but my quick glance at the table of contents suggests he does not get into this level of detail about the monitors themselves.
Cheers,
tod
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Posted by: Martin Euredjian <martin_05@rocketmail.com>
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