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 Robinson <email@hidden>
- Date: Fri, 06 Jun 2014 19:12:39 -0500
So the world viewing on un-calibrated screens are wrong and you are right. Good luck with that.
Sent from JRs iPad Air
> On Jun 6, 2014, at 7:09 PM, Andrew Rodney <email@hidden> wrote:
>
>> On Jun 6, 2014, at 5:53 PM, John Robert Robinson <email@hidden> wrote:
>>
>> Excluding print media, if no one viewing your calibration work is calibrated, what value is your calibration?
>
> The current numbers are correct and look that way in a defined way. On other devices. Print or otherwise. Any other output device, print or otherwise that you want to reproduce the image on will appear the same! The alternative is the same RGB numbers look different to everyone as you have ignored in my comment about buying a TV. If you make the image appear as you desire on your editing workstation, you can share that color appearance to anyone else who wants to see the image as you did.
>
> Now if you don't care, if you're fine with all those TV differences from the same numbers, and again, this isn't the list to be reading.
>
> You either care about representing a pile of numbers to appear a fixed and correct way or you don't.
>
> Andrew Rodney
> http://www.digitaldog.net/
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