I must admit I don't get all the technical aspects of color theory, but I found this video interesting and useful. A link to this vid. was just posted on FB into the Photoshop Users Group. Thank you. I have some questions, can you please tell me the best place to leave those questions (blog, here, FB, LI?)?
When you say 'calibrate,' there is more to this than just the color gamut (if your calibration allows you to alter it). That said, if it can, go bigger; P3 than smaller, sRGB.
@@DigitaldogNet thank you for a nice video and swift reply. I have xrite I one and at first was trying to calibrate both screens to sRGB and match their color temperature to D6500 but even with extended samples displaycal was returning profiles with results close to max delta 1.7, but on visual check 50% grey was having significant tint difference when compared side by side. And also if I was using adobeRGB profile photoshop was displaying significantly different colors than other color managed applications on windows. But using xRite’s advanced calibration I managed to get pretty close results on both displays. Using sRGB as one display is 99.8% adobeRGB gamut, other is 87.4%
Calibration is setting WP, gamma and Cd/m2 plus, for a very few displays, the actual color gamut. So that part (difference in sRGB/P3/Adobe RGB) gamut can only be provided on displays like SpectraView or similar "smart display systems" that can control this location of the primaries and thus, the color gamut. I'd suggest you ingore this and simply calibrate the three attributes to produce the results you desire.
@@DigitaldogNet both my displays could limit gamut to sRGB/Adobe RGB, one is 10 bit dell i believe u2413 another one is eizo with internal calibration, and if I choke gamut to sRGB it actually lovers the gamut coverage if i measure it with displaycal and i1 Pro
A problem I have is that while one photographers photos might look slightly different on various monitors, they will still look consistent and not appear blatantly over saturated in any of them. Mine will look good on a calibrated monitor, or my phone, and all of a sudden appear bright red on a wide gamut monitor. What am I doing differently than the other photographer?
Dont know if anyone cares but if you are bored like me atm you can watch all the latest movies and series on Instaflixxer. Been watching with my girlfriend these days xD