Wide gamut monitors that do not closely match some standardized wide gamut will always need to "downsample" to a narrower precise gamut or be destined never to be trusted for, say, P3 color accuracy.Īnyway, with a meter you start off with monitor's sRGB emulation and tweak from there so no massive adjustments are 's all done in the monitor I'm not sure if monitor's LUT operations effectively truncate the number of gradation steps in output in sRGB mode but that is exactly why you probably need to get a monitor that is natively close to your target gamut (rec709 as I understand) otherwise you are always "in danger". There is also another VA 32 Philips I have been looking at tho.įabianHansen wrote:If a monitor is limited colour space via calibrator, doesnt that effectively make the monitor less bit colour? Without going quite a bit up in price to for example LG 32UD99 or Acer PE320QK, thee option is 27" for IPS, LG 27UK650 and HP Envy 27s. ![]() IPS have IPS glow too, but might not be that bad. That was the one someone else recommended I should get because I do gaming too, but I don't know. The VA viewing angle, that is partly solved by the Philips being curved but some say that is not recommended either. You just mean thee R G And B "sliders" right? If so, how would you know how you are in the right area anyway? Some program you can have with a colormunki to know when you are in the right ballpark? Don't know about the others I have been looking at. I think the BenQ have a sRGB mode, but don't think the Philips one do. With VA, especially that big, viewed from a short distance, you won't really be sure of color/gamma in outward parts of the picture even if you sit right in front of it. But there is probably an sRGB emulation mode which you can bring close to target with your Colormunki and, say, HCFR and select sRGB or Rec709 as Resolve color management's output colourspace. That should include gamut controls which many monitors lack, sadly. That Benq was measured to significantly less than P3 color gamut here: Ĭalibrating internally means using only monitor's controls to achieve calibration with no help from software LUTs in the computer. In my list of monitors I have yet to decide a specific one, only one is IPS, and thats one is 27" others is 32" and is VA. People recomended those monitors and some else to me because I am just hobbyist when it comes to this stuff and says that VA is way better than what it was just a few years ago. ![]() ![]() What do you mean "calibrate it internally" ? Or you can try to calibrate it internally as close to sRGB.Īlso, VA monitors are not the wisest of choices.and wide gamut doesn't mean DCI-P3, many a times it's skewed closer to AdobeRGB. But you'd also need a viewer LUT created as described here:Įxactly because the monitor is wide gamut, but not quite there. Mario Kalogjera wrote:Yes, it can be color managed if you choose so.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |