Mark Booth Offline Upload & Sell: Off
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p.1 #2 · Apple Monitors and Brightness | |
Unfortunately, LCD displays tend to be too bright. Apple Cinema displays in particular. I've found that I have better luck avoiding too dark prints by keeping my 23" Cinema Display's brightness control (it's really just a backlight control) turned pretty much all the way down. I calibrate the display (Spyder2Pro) with that brightness in that low setting. Then, when I edit my images, I don't end up making them too dark before printing.
It's not that a bright display causes dark prints, per se. Rather, a bright display causes you to edit your prints to be too dark. Here's an article about the subject:
http://www.shutterbug.com/techniques/digital_darkroom/0809prints/
That said, I still sometimes end up with images that print too dark. There are those that feel even the lowest brightness setting on a Cinema Display is too bright. They may have a point. Some folks have tried using a program called Shades in conjunction with their calibration software. I haven't tried it yet, but here's the link:
http://www.charcoaldesign.co.uk/shades
I'm seriously considering getting a non-Apple display to replace my 23" Cinema Display. PC-compatible displays offer a much wider range of adjustment possibilities.
Mark
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