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06/09/2008 11:35:35 AM · #1 |
Hey folks.
Just wanted to get some feedback, and maybe start a thread, about issues related to monitors. In my limited experience so far, I've been tripped up on at least a few occasions by post processing errors that were in part related to how things looked on one monitor vs. how they looked on another. I understand the issues of calibration for print making, but I'm less versed in how to anticipate how an image is going to look on the "generic" DPC monitor that people will be using to look at our efforts.
So ... blue ribbon guys and gals ... besides great photographic talent and creativity, how do you make sure what YOU see is what I get?
Barry
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06/09/2008 01:05:46 PM · #2 |
Short answer: You can't.
No ribbons here but I do calibrate my monitor.
You have no control over how an image will look on another monitor. The best you can do is calibrate your own.
There will always be users with monitors that are set too bright or too dark hence changing the view of images. |
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