Watch out: most papers have UV optical brightners in them that give them whiter (bluer) look. You need to use a neutral gray card to do any visual matching. Daylight temperature is highly dependent on the time of the day. D65 is the average of an overcast sky at noon facing north. Also, without a colorimeter you can't really colour profile your monitor which is way more important than getting the white point right.
@JTshoot2 жыл бұрын
Exactly this! Also emitted color and reflected color are two separate beasts, please don't use a sheet of paper for color calibration, just rent a colorimeter for a few bucks ang get a perfect result.
@angrysocialjusticewarrior Жыл бұрын
Did you miss the part where he displayed the results of this method and proved that you can get reasonably close to the same results as using a colorimeter?
@angrysocialjusticewarrior Жыл бұрын
@@JTshoot Like I asked the guy you are responding to. Did you miss the part where he displayed the results of this method and proved that you can get reasonably close to the same results as using a colorimeter?
@panosdadamis5927 Жыл бұрын
@@angrysocialjusticewarrior you can't even get an icc profile out of the process, what are you talking about? This method might work for a monitor already close to sRGB and the specified brightness but nothing else. Tone response curves are not linear. Gamut coverage is never perfect. You need a colorimeter.
@dtibor5903 Жыл бұрын
Almost all $150+ monitors are factory calibrated to some degree, so just adjusting the white point usually gives pretty good results. I usually use my smartphone as reference. It has white point adjustment. As i'm quite picky about the white point, I regularly finetune it. For office screens i use a bit of blue tint to keep me focused, around 6000k, those yellow screens puts me to sleep. The office has huge windows and a lot of natural light.
@Ekvorivious Жыл бұрын
"I happen to have a pair of eyes" This is how you know the video is going to be good! XD
@terabit.6 ай бұрын
Gay
@WSPSIMONDev28 күн бұрын
Jesus loves you all.
@Hybred2 жыл бұрын
Take a new OLED smartphone (Galaxy, iPhone, etc) pull up an image on the phone and on your monitor and adjust the monitor to match the phone's display, since good smartphones cover 99%+ of the colorspace, the only issue comes from "eyeballing it" but if you're just trying to play games or view media it gets pretty darn close. If your display is older or it's a cheap low end this may not work as well.
@Oldsah2 жыл бұрын
disable any vivid or enhance mode before though. My pixel 4a has a neutral mode and so does the oled switch
@CaptainScorpio242 жыл бұрын
nice idea 🙂
@ProfessorKalkyluss2 жыл бұрын
Yeah but no. Phone screens are not calibrated.
@raiistmar2 жыл бұрын
@@ProfessorKalkylussexactly, I don’t know where the idea that they’re calibrated came from. Even in a phone store, you just have to look at two different test phones of the same model and you’re very likely to notice that, although similar, the colors definitely don’t look exactly the same.
@ProfessorKalkyluss2 жыл бұрын
@@raiistmar exactly
@raffyluvmiharu2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for always including monitor calibration recommendation for the monitor you review. Most review doesnt include that and it is quite helpful that you include them for us peeps that doesnt know how the best possible calibration to make the viewing experience better. Keep up the great review Also, I hope you consider reviewing the Lenovo G24-20 (the big brother of G40-10). I heard it is a much better improvement than its little brother. And is it worth to consider as one of the best 1080p monitor right now
@WSPSIMONDev28 күн бұрын
Jesus loves you all.
@MrObsolescence2 жыл бұрын
I watched many youtubes videos within the last 15 years. This has to be one of the best tutorial videos so far. great execution, great story telling, great tools. Didn't thought you were a non native speaker until the very end. keep the videos coming.
@techlessYT2 жыл бұрын
Wow, thanks! 🙂
@thischannelisdeleted2 жыл бұрын
Are you deaf to accents?
@firstlast95002 жыл бұрын
@@thischannelisdeleted People can have accents and still speak English as their first language
@nohero1782 жыл бұрын
@@firstlast9500 True, but it's typically not a GERMAN accent, you fool.
@daronnon122 жыл бұрын
@@nohero178 hey be nice
@KokoroKatsura Жыл бұрын
it really fucking boggles my mind why lcd pc monitors aren't precallibrated before hitting shelves
@cyano3d3 ай бұрын
they are but not with perfection, which is the weird part like its avoided on purpose to sell higher end models
@pedropierre9594Ай бұрын
They but the displays vary between each other so what works for one wont work for the other
@WSPSIMONDev28 күн бұрын
Jesus loves you all.
@cyano3d27 күн бұрын
@@WSPSIMONDev jesus isn't real
@pattechs Жыл бұрын
lol, das "bis zum nächsten Video" am Ende, kam sehr überraschend. Danke für die Tipps. Sehr gutes Video. Weiter so! :)
@jamescordon81332 жыл бұрын
If you need colour accuracy then you do need an accurate calibration. If you want a rough approximation the online tests are fine and useful. If you want your screen to look nice for TV or games just set it how it suits you. Easy tip for setting monitor whiteness: look at a white screen for a few seconds then leave the room for a few minutes, do this as many times as you need, your eyes adjust and fool you if you look at the screen for a period.
@synthoelectro2 жыл бұрын
this is the same thing that happens with the ears when mixing audio. One has to stop for a while and come back.
@WSPSIMONDev28 күн бұрын
Jesus loves you all.
@CaveyMoth2 жыл бұрын
When I'm using Lagom's gamma calibration slide, I usually adjust my monitors' contrast, rather than gamma, to get the right values to appear in the charts on the slide. It seems to work pretty well because contrast has a direct effect on the gamma curve.
@MikkoRantalainen8 ай бұрын
If you touch the contrast settings, be sure to check for black and white clipping. For many modern LCD monitors the "contrast" setting actually adjusts white peak values and if you adjust it too much, the checkboard pattern that's supposed to have e.g. checkerboard from 253 to 255 (for 8 bit channels) goes all white meaning you lose all details in close to white values because values close to max already clip to 100%.
@WSPSIMONDev28 күн бұрын
Jesus loves you all.
@GeertKuster Жыл бұрын
I was having issues with mainly the clarity. The brightness slider (solely) wasn't much help unfortenately. I followed these steps 1 by 1 and the monitor looks so much better than it was. I never would've thought that adjusting the Gamma would make so much difference. Also never really 'dared' to touch RGB-sliders, because a screw-up is easily made. But these and at last the brightness was the best. Massive thanks!
@WSPSIMONDev28 күн бұрын
Jesus loves you all.
@lizardltd Жыл бұрын
Helped me a lot! I'm an intermediate artist, so colours do matter to me, but since I don't earn that much yet I couldn't allow myself to invest in a very percise screen, nor in a colorimiter... Thanks for the vid!
@Kogami2 жыл бұрын
This is such perfect timing; I just bought my new monitor and have been looking EVERYWHERE for a good guide to color calibrate with pure eyeballing. I just tried it out while watching the video and while I can't attest to its accuracy with my amateur eyes, the whites on my screen aren't so yellow-ish anymore! It doesn't seem like my AOC 24G2 V1 is able to adjust gamma settings outside of preset ones but even the paper trick alone made some noticeable improvements, so this was a HUGE lifesaver, thank you so much!!
@lucidyn2 жыл бұрын
Hi yes i can totally understand you pain with that monitor I just brought one from amazon. a little trick I figured out was to put it on gamma 3, open the windows calibration program along side the nvidia control panel and adjust the gamma while looking at the circle image thing. what did you come up with the rgb values? its driving me nuts
@KokoroKatsura Жыл бұрын
A N I M E N I M E
@SelectImage2 жыл бұрын
Interesting to see how close the visual calibration came to be. Next step is to profile the monitor (eg make sure the reds are not too blue or yellow) Some more advanced monitors let you dial this in also but its going to be harder to do by eye. If you have a good generic profile supplied by the manufacturer then that would sort it for you. I bought a colorimeter as I print for other pople but you only need to buy one amongst a group of people if you mainly do things for fun. A D65 calibration will be good for posting to social media and other screen based presentation but if you print on paper you may find your image prints warmer than expected, a white point of nearer 5800K will allow you to better see how an image will print.
@NotyourBussiness Жыл бұрын
@techless von wo hast du die wallpaper her? 3:50
@toonnut12 жыл бұрын
I've been waiting for a video like this
@robertulrich39642 жыл бұрын
manual gamma calibration has always been tricky. the best one i know of is the trusty old signal bars used by tv stations. since gamma was mostly designed to control the shadows, this method using dark squares until they disappear is probably the best you can do under the circumstances. as for max nits of the monitor, going over 100 nits doesn't make much sense because rec. 709 uses that as broadcast standard. 300-400 nits is psuedo hdr or super-bright sdr and doesn't have an actual SMTPE viewing environment. as for getting max nits by hand, because your eyes eventually adjust to the viewing environment. any max nits calibration would need to compare against another white source to work, imho wouldn't work without an outside light source. windows has a strange concept that max nits is how much black gets washed out.
@Marko-xn4kq2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for all the amazing reviews and helpful videos. Keep going, you've got great future ahead of you.
@Hybred2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the links in the description to the sites you mentioned
@fordcrews3362 Жыл бұрын
The bad thing about the colorimeters isn't the cost, it's that they expect you to only use it on one computer at a time, install/uninstall the software every use. They should work on every computer you plug them into, without having to put in serial numbers, activate, deactivate, etc. It's hardware, the software should come with it.
@Kiritomens Жыл бұрын
I don't get it I'm pretty sure displayCAL is free right. Or do they hardware lock the colorimeter? Or are you talking about the software that the colorimeter company ships with the product? I still use my old ass spyder 3 to calibrate my monitors with display cal. I know this isn't optimal since the lenses on those break down over time, but it's still accurate enough, since i don't do any professional work.
@Rockstars-Gig-Memorabilia Жыл бұрын
Thank you for such a very clear and informative video. I have to say you look so much better than before I made the adjustments!!
@falls_lowercase Жыл бұрын
Shower thought: Take a color on the screen. Print it. Now match both colors. Idk if that'll actually work. Was just thinking
@YtStaffMember Жыл бұрын
but printers also print colors differently dont they>
@NoobSvCy4 ай бұрын
Can take the screenshot to a phone tho, or any other reference display of friends and stuff if they look good ig
@aggressiveaegyo7679 Жыл бұрын
I think the setup should be fairly simple. Without any devices, just a monitor and your eyes. For example, in Adobe products like Premiere Pro. It's easy to find the gamma limits there. Set indicators in the program when dark and light details begin to disappear, then adjust the monitor so that you can see these details with your eyes, and not just on the highlights graph. Sorry if I confused you, English is not my forte.
@dtibor5903 Жыл бұрын
Calibration is way more complicated than that. For example ICC profiles created with colorimeters have 3dimensional color correction data.
@Vitaliuz Жыл бұрын
What's the point in doing proper color calibration, if you're going to surround the monitor with the RGBT lighting.
@Omkardavare2 жыл бұрын
I had brought BenQ EX2510 before 3-4months by watching your video and your suggestion to my comment , just using your settings and it works AMAZING
@sL1NK2 жыл бұрын
This channel is golden, worth a sub!
@alwaysemployed6568 ай бұрын
You can create your own gamma correction charts, but you HAVE to make sure the grey reference RGB values are CORRECT. The grey reference RGB values for gamma 2.2 are 187, 187, 187. You can't always trust gamma correction charts you see online because you don't know if the gray reference is correct. Uploading images online can alter the colors, so the grey you are looking at may not be correct.
@MikkoRantalainen8 ай бұрын
The RGB values 187, 187, 187 are indeed 50% grey (should match pure black and white checkboard) if you have sRGB color space. Some wide gamut monitors have AdobeRGB or some proprieatary color space and you should first toggle the monitor to sRGB settings before trying to adjust the gamma this way. And make sure that the image has correct colorspace. Modern browsers convert from image colorspace to monitor colorspace if operating system settings claim that the monitor or source image is not sRGB.
@alwaysemployed6568 ай бұрын
@@MikkoRantalainen Yep that is correct! 187 is the grey sweet spot because display cards tell the monitor 187, 187, 187 is what 50% Black and 50% white is supposed to look like.
@MikkoRantalainen8 ай бұрын
@@alwaysemployed656 Yes, for 8-bit variant of sRGB color space. My point was that RGB != sRGB and if somebody speaks about RGB instead of sRGB, you shouldn't assume those are the same.
@alwaysemployed6568 ай бұрын
@@MikkoRantalainen Oh I'm aware of that. As a matter of fact, sRGB is very outdated. Still, I use sRGB as the START pivot point when calibrating to reach a wider gamut. My final calibrations are obviously way much bigger than sRGB.
@alwaysemployed6568 ай бұрын
@@MikkoRantalainen And also my personal brightness nit sweet spot is 275 nits when displaying pure white on the screen. I find 275 nits to be the closest to looking like real life. I calibrate my monitors to resemble real life, not to match prints.
@MegaAfiss Жыл бұрын
Awesome tutorial! Thank you very much!
@komanderxp178510 ай бұрын
Very helpful, appreciate it!
@LordCarmesimXXVII2 жыл бұрын
People say that a proper calibrated monitor to 6500K temperature looks like it has a yellow tint, the white is yellowish. If you try to calibrate to a sheet of paper, it will always be too blue.
2 жыл бұрын
That's a very cool video, thank you!
@blackmanvomitsoul2 жыл бұрын
You deserve many more sub, my man. The production quality top notch, your voice is so soothing and of course the depth of your knowledge and the way you share it with us. Thank you so much for doing this. After watching your reviews i bought Gigabyte G24F, working like a charm. Love from India.
@H4x4t3hN00bz2 жыл бұрын
another useful video, thanks
@ParthToshniwal-b4j Жыл бұрын
what is wallpaper on monitor in background called
@youngfella29222 жыл бұрын
awesome video mate!
@skyunn2 жыл бұрын
Where do you get those slick wallpapers?
@noah296gt32 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for this video. Currently shopping for a decent monitor and your videos help out a lot!!
@omarfouda19942 жыл бұрын
Luv your down to earth ways my man, that's some of the most relevant information to be used. Thank you so much
@obayev8 ай бұрын
Thank you 🙏🏻 ☺️
@terry- Жыл бұрын
Great! More of this would be very interesting! Cheers!
@Antoine27104 Жыл бұрын
Great video. Thanks a lot
@muhammadnasim64362 жыл бұрын
I didn't even knew that monitor calibrating is a thing until this video popped up in my recommendation
@photonboy9992 жыл бұрын
*white paper reflection* I realize you said the ambient light is "hopefully close to daylight.." but it's important to realize that a LOT of lights, especially older LED-based lights tend to emit a poor representation of normal light. It's usually quite blue.
@SianaGearz Жыл бұрын
Worse, LEDs and CCFLs both tend to have an overpronounced green in order to boost efficiency. If you get red-blue balance wrong, that's just a different colour temperature; wrong amount of green is much worse for colour work. Then also paper has a little bit of optical brightener, something that collects ambient energy, downshifts it and emits cyan light, to counteract a little bit of beige tinge of cellulose. Of course the brightener responds differently to different light sources, it doesn't just shift the colour evenly.
@TrusteftTech Жыл бұрын
Interesting video, thanks for sharing.
@BSEUNHIR Жыл бұрын
I prefer the windows built in gamma calibration settings. The pattern is very clear and you get to run a slider back and forth until the patterns merge.
@ΓιάννηςΧατζηγεωργίου-θ9σ Жыл бұрын
You are right. We don't calibrate our monitor with colorimeter but with spectrophotometer (long live to X-Rite). Secondly, if our monitor's color/brightness uniformity sucks (which happens quite often on LCD monitors), the calibration process is pointless for obvious reasons. You can bring a DE 0 on everything to the point where the spectro reads but what good does when 1 inch to your left you have 7500K and 1 inch to your right 5500? Color and brightness uniformity is the No1 prerequisite for those who would like to calibrate their devices.
@TwoSpiritPenguin Жыл бұрын
No matter what rgb i set i only see grey, any help?
@unholiestАй бұрын
Setting up gamma is a headache and I can't decide which gamma to set through the built-in Windows display calibration setting
@butterflymoon63682 жыл бұрын
Can you do this all with a laptop?
@Jerryzart2 жыл бұрын
I'm a huge fan of your channel
@WKHWEISS2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing this Video, I am a professional Advertising Photographer. To be honest with you, the color calibrator device is essential for my daily work, and it is crucial if you work with photos or videos color correction. The most important thing is that it will adjust your monitor brightness according to the surrounding ambiance light then maintaining the color accuracy But nothing of this will happen if you are using an 8bit monitor , since the color range is narrow so you will not notice the difference You need to use a 10bit monitor for this purpose
@techlessYT2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for your input! Though I have to say that I kinda disagree with your statement about 8 bit. Color range in the sense of color gamut volume isn't directly related to the color depth aka 8/10 bit. It's easily possible to have an 8 bit monitor that has a bigger color gamut than a given 10 bit monitor. Though the graduation between colors is much more coarse the less bits there are. So it's generally a good idea to have 10 bits+ when the monitor has a wide color gamut to avoid banding. I have to say though that for typical color gamut volumes of consumer monitors (up to give or take 150% sRGB) 8 bits really are sufficient for general use. Of course for you as a professional photographer a 10 bit monitor makes much more sense. In that case I'd probably also get a 10 bit+ monitor just to be extra sure that any banding that might occur is in the photo and not caused by the monitor.
@michael_r2 жыл бұрын
Not only that, but as a photographer with a Canon photo printer, I use an x-rite to calibrate both the monitor and the printer for each set of ink cartridges and different ICC profiles for each paper and that’s the only way I’ve ever gotten my soft proofs to look like the hard copy proof.
@sashabagdasarow4972 жыл бұрын
Can I ask something? Let's say you edit a photo and make it look good, alright, but then that photo will be spread to millions of different drvices, most of them will have way off color configuration and your colors will be altered strongly. Considering what I said, why does it matter to have a perfectly (very well) calibrated display?
@SianaGearz2 жыл бұрын
People used to do colour work since well over 25 years ago in 8-bit ecosystem, 10-bit support is fairly recent. If you get the WP and gamut in the ballpark before you start straining the numerical precision of the interface or RAMDAC, you can be totally fine with 8-bit. Though 10bit is still a substantial improvement, well recommended.
@SianaGearz2 жыл бұрын
@@sashabagdasarow497 You still need a quality reference. If some content consumer is using a device that is wildly off-colour, they'll just have to suffer similarly degraded colours on everything, they've probably gotten used to it, their brain might start cancelling out the distortion, and with properly coloured content, it could look to them as-expected. Content that is badly coloured will look off to them, because it doesn't look the way they're used to seeing it. If you have a colour-correct device that you author on, your consumers will suffer mere single colour distortion, always, as determined by their device. When you aren't using a colour correct device for authoring, they will suffer worst case double colour distortion, that of their device plus opposite of that of yours. So that's another way of looking at it. To give some simplified examples, say your monitor has its gamma a little too bright, and your consumer's is a little too dark; then instead of looking a little too dark, your content looks to this person MUCH too dark and is distinctly uncomfortable to view. If you buy a monitor today, odds are, it might be just a tad too green; but if someone has had theirs for a while, maybe it's a little too purple, and you risk making something that looks MUCH too purple. Beyond some threshold, people get very sensitive to skin colours, people can look sick if they're either too purple or too green. Then to be kept in mind that you're not always working against the unknown, there are a lot of colourproof workflows, where you're taking the full device chain into account. You can get a calibration from your printer/ink if you have a colorimeter. You can get a calibration from your offset printing house, they for sure do calibration sheets. You get an ICC profile that you can use to view the colour in your authoring software specifically as it will appear on the final product. But you need a calibrated display as well, or the result is going to be meaningless and probably won't look like that at all.
@laluyank44522 жыл бұрын
Hi great content, thank you. Curious to know what wallpaper you have in the begining of the video.
@ClaytonMacleod Жыл бұрын
“That you’ll probably only use once.” Depends who you are and what you’re doing. Displays change as they age and need to be calibrated periodically as a result. This is why calibration software offers to remind you every few weeks or months. I do t do anything professionally with my displays, so I only recalibrate once a year. Every single one drifts a little bit during that year. CRTs, LCDs, and OLEDs. One of the first steps is setting the RGB balance, and none of those settings has ever landed back on the same settings I used the last time. It always changes a little. Will it matter to you? This of course depends on what you’re doing and why. Some professionals recalibrate at the start of each new job, even if that’s every day. Will it change much in a day? Not likely. But to some people, they’d rather start from a known point than waste time assuming something is right only to find out it wasn’t and have to redo stuff.
@ferdikadatu687 Жыл бұрын
Thanks sir, you saved me a lot because I can't effort that calorimeter. I want to calibrate my laptop monitor and my extended monitor to make digital painting but many youtube video using calorimeter
@Maisonier2 жыл бұрын
but what about the contrast? But Wow ... this works perfect for me in an old LCD, ... thank you. Liked and subscribed.
@whitehorsept Жыл бұрын
The challenge I have (and spent many hours in), is to calibrate a projector image on a white wall. Trying to have a good color accuracy and brightness/contrast. Sometimes seems it is good, but then comes a particular situation where i see it is not good. (I have tried to compare to the colors of what i see on a oled phone screen, but i never manage to match it.) When the projector is on hdr mode, many image controls also become locked.
@MikkoRantalainen8 ай бұрын
The problem with projectors is that unless your whole room is black, the light that reflects from the screen to the room and back towards the screen causes major difference to the resulting image depending on the surfaces of all the stuff in the room. And to calibrate a projector, you would really need a spectrophotometer with camera-style optics and those things are insanely expensive.
@flockelocke2297 Жыл бұрын
I wanted to return my new Acer Predator on tuesday. This is an Acer what you have there and my Acer XB283K is way too green also. White has green tint or white gamma is greenish If this is correct english but I am only on console, so it is hard to adjust it my likings. I lowered green for sure too and turned up blue but after your video am not so sure anymore. I try the paper test when there is daylight. Can it be that it is maybe not fully fixable due to being a low blue light panel?
@desadesa2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for your videos. You can also test in wide gamut monitors if the software clamping methods work to make it color accurate.
@nssSmooge2 жыл бұрын
What is the wallpaper?
@shotarcherz16902 жыл бұрын
Is there a way I could borrow a colorimeter?
@blueridgepics Жыл бұрын
i'm skeptical of thie first instructions in this video. 2:14 A huge mistake is thinking your room ambient lighting is color correct. Even when you introduce sunlight into the room the color of the walls, ceiling, floor and furniture will reflect their own color.
@mrbradley1 Жыл бұрын
Facts that what I thought immediately too. How can you be sure/ trust that the environmental light to be having a perfect white balance? 😅
@ultrarare_kev Жыл бұрын
Das "bis zum nächsten Video" hat mich erschrocken 😂
@victorx46482 жыл бұрын
But what's the point if the display's color transfer characteristics are usually irregular? And to make the display represent the near-to-correct colors, you need to do hundreds of measurements, including tracking the primary colors.
@PavelPirogov2 жыл бұрын
I use horizontal black to white gradient image. then adjust brightness and contrast so white end be as white as possible and dark as dark as possible. also dark and bright sides should not have large areas of same brightness (large black/white area) difference should be noticeable. more even gradient is more better
@radry100 Жыл бұрын
why do you make these adjustment in the monitor instead of the OS? Windows even provides a "calibration" tool to do it by eye.
@tamaskajfis36492 жыл бұрын
Hi, I used a phone appliction to "calibrate" laptops monitor(WB), its called Light meter.
@sunsh9n02 жыл бұрын
Be sure to turn off windows night light before anything to your monitor.
@MLWJ19932 жыл бұрын
Goes for low blue light modes in the display OSD as well.
@SianaGearz2 жыл бұрын
That's a similar way to how i figured out monitor calibration pretty much decades ago... except brightness calibration, but then i would say ideal brightness is situational anyway, i change it like 10 times a day. I have a little software installed on Windows to help with that, Win10_BrightnessSlider, but there's like a dozen others, this actually goes into the monitor's settings via DCC and changes the value, same as adjusting it via menu, just comfier. So while good to know, i don't think app based thing has been all too helpful for me. To be kept in mind as well, display backlight will drift under spec or independent test brightness with time. Was hoping for more fresh tricks. I mean it stands to reason that the camera sensor of a smartphone might be useful to calibrate gamut and gamma. My primary monitor doesn't seem to urgently need gamut calibration, but monitors with brighter or narrower gamut could benefit from it a lot, but you'll be fighting against monitor's internal tables so there wouldn't really be a handful of convenient values you could tune by hand, and you have no way to synthesize the ICC either. LEDs work very poorly for light reference and CFLs even worse. Halogen can be useful. Though by all reason it shouldn't work. I mean the 20W halogen bulb is what 2800°K, well short of the target; but white paper is a weird material, it's actually laced with brightener which emits some cyan light from incident light, but how it reacts to different lights can differ a lot. If i were to guess Halogen is at least good enough to tell if you're too green or not green enough, while the other two tend to be different shades of too green.
@robindinero96894 ай бұрын
does this also work for tv's if u wanna use them as a pc screen? great vid btw, thanks a lot!
@rohanleander2 жыл бұрын
Like for the wallpaper used in this video.
@itaiaxelrod Жыл бұрын
Thank you I finally got it to be almost perfect thanks to that 1 tip not change one RGB and to not go over what the manufacture put as default
@exmodeus2 жыл бұрын
Well packed sir. Btw, can we create DIY colorimeter, like utilising TCS3200 or something?
@mondotv4216 Жыл бұрын
When you're measuring brightness on a monitor like that you have to do it more towards the centre of the screen. There was quie bad fall off at the corners and edges so I think if you'd gone a little further in you would have hit the brightness mark exactly.
@jccgold10 ай бұрын
What calibration tool that he used after the white paper adjustment?
@Miguel-fm8xh5 ай бұрын
ICH WUSSTE DASS DU BESTIMMT DEUTSCH SPRICHST, DANKE FÜR DIE BESTÄTIGUNG AM ENDE JETZT KANN ICH SCHLAFEN
@SaccoBelmonte11 ай бұрын
Comparing the gamma correction from EIZO and Lagom the EIZO one seems more on point.
@Lennard2222 жыл бұрын
Finally the nearsightedness come in handy
@Agp1597 Жыл бұрын
I have a question what about in a display with HDR that mostly locks every settings to chance this
@NotyourBussiness Жыл бұрын
where is the wallpaper from ?
@javianbrown8627 Жыл бұрын
Would you recommend this for a Tv? I can't get the TV I'm my room to look right.
@DethronerX11 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@A.Dokimos Жыл бұрын
@techiess Can you compare if eizo's gamma test, works better than the lagom gama calibration bars? Is it more accurate?
@julianmustofa44232 жыл бұрын
I found out that calibrating gamma is easier using the sharpness test rather than gamma test itself
@rebelblade71592 жыл бұрын
I did something with the Splendid settings on my ASUS VP249QGR that made things look much more vibrant, especially in games. I found out that if I enable Shadow boost while having the Game Mode preset on, it corrected the dull looking surfaces in darker areas that you get when you enable game mode while everything looked more vibrant and colorful. The differences between this and default look almost like HDR vs SDR.
@cosiney2 жыл бұрын
What backgrounds are on the thumbnail and in the video
@imembridibuddha Жыл бұрын
So what is the best way to measure gamma without colorimeter?
@NightOwlGames2 жыл бұрын
i recieved the best advice ever it really helped me its very simple to do, think of someone with white skin, Boris Johnson for example, put his face on the screen now turn the color up, when his face starts to go orange go back till it looks white again and thats it it really does help the colors for everything else no money or tv expert required.
@JeskidoYT2 жыл бұрын
Could you do a guide or tutorial on TV color calibration? Is it worth doing it these days?
@ipapiga Жыл бұрын
pls name of the desktop coverr from the first scene
@floriangoldschmied92312 жыл бұрын
Why am I watching this? I'm color blind, lol
@mimotojiyt2 жыл бұрын
Should we do this on our laptop screens ?
@bimsbarkas Жыл бұрын
You might be able to do the white point, but good luck on Gamma curve
@blk_lies6 ай бұрын
An iPhone and the natural light feature turned on (most default) will give a very good white point.
@ArielJerseyJr2 жыл бұрын
I just match my G24F with my iPhone 11 by eye. Very satisfied with the results.
@techstepman3 ай бұрын
i got a guy to calibrate my monitor (it wasnt for free) ... after he did i spend an entire afternoon settings things as i had set them up before. Apparently the calibration should be made by the set of eyes that will spend the most time looking at the monitor.
@Azraenore2 жыл бұрын
Great video
@Azraenore2 жыл бұрын
I watched only 5 seconds so far but my future telling abilities show me that the whole video is great
@jpez312 жыл бұрын
what do you recommended for gaming and little editing sir @techless Gigabyte G24F or MSI OPTIX G241?
@matmat52202 жыл бұрын
Thanks!!!!
@keantoken6433 Жыл бұрын
The Nvidia color correction controls are useful especially since you can adjust gamma separately for each color (I was able to set Gamma for 3 different brightness levels using the brightness/contrast levels independently for each color). Unfortunately I use AMD now and AMD doesn't have anything that is equivalent or works as well as far as I can tell. I could download these correction curves from the graphics card using DispCal and use them as a profile, but again I can't find anything I can use this way with AMD. It is amazing when you get it looking like your monitor is just a portal to a different place.
@krisieskrisi38972 жыл бұрын
I think it is useful for beginners if you show a bit of the processing (20 sec) how and what should actually see when they try to calibrate.
@AluminumHaste11 ай бұрын
Is this recorded on an iphone? There's this really weird smoothing or beautifying of your skin, like you have too much makeup on.