Andrei Zdetovetchi
New member
Hello people,
The subject of color profiles, monitor calibration and so on, is pretty new to me and recently I got into some problems. I hope I can find a little help here...
My photos are intended to be displayed on the computer screen, like websites and multimedia productions. And I've noticed that my photos looks sometimes more sometimes less different on other computers than mine.
For instance, I have at home an LG M208WA screen. Running on Vista64, with an Nvidia video card. At the studio, I have the same display, also with an Nvidia card but on Windows XP SP3.
On XP there is a color settings tool in the Nvidia control panel, that allows me to tune the WB, brightness, contrast, gamma, based on my visual feedback. On Vista64, I cannot find this tool in the NV control panel, so I have some default settings.
After I tuned the settings on the computer at the studio, the WinXP one, I see a really big difference on the pictures I see there and the same pictures I see at home. At home the pictures are very bright and washed out.
This jumped into my eye, when I took a pictures of a product on a black background. At the studio the background was really black, but at home I could see the fabric of the background and the way it folded. So I don't know which monitor was right! The goal was to shoot the product on black and not to care about selecting and removing the background.
Other case was when I took some interior shots in a building and after I processed the images at home and delivered to the client, he said that the pictures are too warm, the white walls have a yellowish cast. But on my monitor it looks ok! Of course it might be an issue of perception, but I suspect that our monitors display the pictures in a different way, and I don't know how to prevent that...
A while ago, a friend lend me a Spyder 2 Express device, and using it I've managed to make my laptop LCD to look the same as an older CRT I've had. Now I'm thinking of buying a Spyder 3 Elite device to make my screens look the same at home and at my studio. But what about other screens, like my clients and my friends have? That's no guarantee that my photos will look the same on them, like on my display...
So, what should I do?
The subject of color profiles, monitor calibration and so on, is pretty new to me and recently I got into some problems. I hope I can find a little help here...
My photos are intended to be displayed on the computer screen, like websites and multimedia productions. And I've noticed that my photos looks sometimes more sometimes less different on other computers than mine.
For instance, I have at home an LG M208WA screen. Running on Vista64, with an Nvidia video card. At the studio, I have the same display, also with an Nvidia card but on Windows XP SP3.
On XP there is a color settings tool in the Nvidia control panel, that allows me to tune the WB, brightness, contrast, gamma, based on my visual feedback. On Vista64, I cannot find this tool in the NV control panel, so I have some default settings.
After I tuned the settings on the computer at the studio, the WinXP one, I see a really big difference on the pictures I see there and the same pictures I see at home. At home the pictures are very bright and washed out.
This jumped into my eye, when I took a pictures of a product on a black background. At the studio the background was really black, but at home I could see the fabric of the background and the way it folded. So I don't know which monitor was right! The goal was to shoot the product on black and not to care about selecting and removing the background.
Other case was when I took some interior shots in a building and after I processed the images at home and delivered to the client, he said that the pictures are too warm, the white walls have a yellowish cast. But on my monitor it looks ok! Of course it might be an issue of perception, but I suspect that our monitors display the pictures in a different way, and I don't know how to prevent that...
A while ago, a friend lend me a Spyder 2 Express device, and using it I've managed to make my laptop LCD to look the same as an older CRT I've had. Now I'm thinking of buying a Spyder 3 Elite device to make my screens look the same at home and at my studio. But what about other screens, like my clients and my friends have? That's no guarantee that my photos will look the same on them, like on my display...
So, what should I do?