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: Andrew Rodney <email@hidden>
- Date: Fri, 06 Jun 2014 18:21:21 -0600
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?
Actually there hasn't been a film, TV show, commercial etc in the last 15+ years that wasn't viewed on a calibrated system. That you don't care to view the data as close to the ideal as possible, provides the impression you are not a content provider. Mom and pop don't care how Iron Man was color corrected. The people who produced the film did care and they absolutely worked in a calibrated display condition. You want to view it on a dimly set iPhone in bright daylight? Knock yourself out. Filmmakers, photographers, graphic artists etc all care about the color they create.
Andrew Rodney
http://www.digitaldog.net/
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