Re: If it looks white on your uncalibrated display, yes it is lying.
Re: If it looks white on your uncalibrated display, yes it is lying.
- Subject: Re: If it looks white on your uncalibrated display, yes it is lying.
- From: John R <email@hidden>
- Date: Fri, 06 Jun 2014 16:15:10 -0700 (PDT)
So who cares if your screen is calibrated "correctly" and mine and Mom and Pop's are aren't calibrated "correctly", no one looks at a calibrated screen any longer anyway.
I insert a point in Photoshop and read the RGB color measured. Are you saying that is incorrect? If I reduce a color cast this way and white is a better white, how the heck is that incorrect? Are you saying I have to have some gizmo to measure white ignoring what Photoshop is telling me?
John R
iMac10,1, Mavericks
3.06 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo
12gig RAM, 1TBHD
On Friday, June 6, 2014 6:06 PM, Andrew Rodney <email@hidden> wrote:
>
>
>On Jun 6, 2014, at 5:01 PM, John R <email@hidden> wrote:
>
>> Through curves if I take out the 5 each of the 10 red and 10 blue I measured in white,
>
>Stop right there. You've said you measured white several times and you've not defined how. We can't continue until you explain what you are doing.
>
>The numbers don't ensure the color is right or wrong all by themselves because there is another output device, your display at the very least in the mix. Go into a TV store and see 100 TV's all getting the same RGB numbers and all looking different. Which is correct?
>
>
>Andrew Rodney
>http://www.digitaldog.net/
>
>
_______________________________________________
Do not post admin requests to the list. They will be ignored.
Colorsync-users mailing list (email@hidden)
Help/Unsubscribe/Update your Subscription:
This email sent to email@hidden