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How do I color calibrate a TV?

  
 
vbnut
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p.1 #1 · How do I color calibrate a TV?


In the past, I've used an Eye-One Display 2 and the accompanying Eye-One Match software on my Windows computer(s) to color calibrate several Dell displays. I've currently using a Calibrite ColorChecker Display Pro to calibrate my BenQ SW 320 with its programmable LUT using BenQ's Palette Master Element software on my Windows computer. Both have worked well to support my photo post-processing.

I'm now in a situation where, in addition to the BenQ SW 320, I've connected at SAMSUNG 65-Inch Class QLED Q80B Series - 4K UHD (specific Samsung model# QN65Q80BAFXZA) to my Windows 11 computer using an HDMI cable. I don't have it turned on all the time, and don't do photo post-processing on it, but when I switch my computer from displaying on the BenQ monitor to displaying on the TV, typically to watch a video (e.g. YouTube), the colors are way off from what I see on BenQ monitor, and (especially skin tones) look quite unnatural.

Does anyone know I would go about color calibrating the Samsung TV, so that the colors are at least close to what I see on the BenQ monitor?



Nov 03, 2025 at 03:01 AM
Stefan Official
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p.1 #2 · How do I color calibrate a TV?


Calman Home

You need to check whether your TV is compatible and can store 3D LUTs internally.



Nov 03, 2025 at 04:59 AM
jeffbuzz
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p.1 #3 · How do I color calibrate a TV?


Stefan Official wrote:
Calman Home

You need to check whether your TV is compatible and can store 3D LUTs internally.


Why would the TV need to store a LUT? The computer just needs an ICC profile for output to the TV. It is treated like any other output device. The profile can be created from whatever software your colorimeter uses.

The problem with many TV's is that they have automatic brightness adjustment and color modes. You'd need to manually override all of those settings on the TV to get consistent output.



Nov 04, 2025 at 01:08 PM
CharleyL
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p.1 #4 · How do I color calibrate a TV?


I have a 60" Visio TV on the wall above my computer that shows each shot that I take as well as going into my laptop PC, and I have color adjusted it using a monitor screen calibrator, though I still wont use these TV images for any POST work. The subject, if human, can see each shot on this monitor as I take them, and they can better adjust their positions/poses for the next shots rapidly. The shots improve as a result, making the whole photo shoot go better and faster. I was a bit skeptical when trying to do this, but it has worked out very well, and I can also watch TV shows and Youtube videos with it too, while seated in my very comfortable chair in my studio.

Charley



Nov 04, 2025 at 02:41 PM
 


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Stefan Official
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p.1 #5 · How do I color calibrate a TV?


ICC profiles cannot precisely limit or define a monitor’s color gamut. Under Windows 11, calibration is only possible through ICC profiles that are loaded into the graphics card.
Professional display devices, on the other hand, can store 3D LUTs (Look-Up Tables) internally. This not only allows you to calibrate the brightness of red, green, and blue, but also to accurately constrain the color gamut itself.
For example, a display can be calibrated to represent sRGB or DCI-P3 exactly.

Many monitors have physically large native gamuts depending on the panel type, but very few are truly well-tuned. Therefore, ICC profiles are useful but they don’t cover everything.
If you decide to calibrate, you should do it properly—after all, you don’t invest in calibration just to get 80 percent results. The fact that ICC profiles have system-level limitations isn’t something manufacturers of low-cost colorimeters like to mention, because they want to sell units.

While such devices can create 3D LUTs, Windows itself cannot process them directly. They must instead be stored inside the display hardware. There they can usually be processed at higher bit depth (more than 10 bit)—something many budget monitors simply cannot handle natively due to their internal signal processing, as they offer no option to store 3D LUTs internally.
Another major advantage: this prevents any software from unintentionally interfering or altering the calibration.

In the video industry, people often use DeckLink cards as dedicated monitor outputs because these devices deliver unmodified signals—completely untouched by Windows, the GPU, or any other software layer. The calibration itself resides inside the monitor or TV.
Test patterns are often generated directly by the display, not sent through Windows.
With software such as Calman Home, you can control and calibrate the TV or monitor directly over the network (usually via IP address).

Suppose a display can cover almost Adobe RGB; through 3D LUTs, you can precisely map it to sRGB or DCI-P3. Regular ICC profiles under Windows cannot do this—they don’t alter the actual gamut, only the tone curve. As a result, many things may look “roughly right,” but the color space itself remains inaccurate, which often shows up as variations in color saturation.

Many friends tell me their new monitor looks “so much more colorful”—usually because modern panels can display more than sRGB.
When you view sRGB photos on such a wide-gamut screen without color management, they appear oversaturated. The monitor is effectively operating in an undefined intermediate gamut somewhere between sRGB and DCI-P3. Many users mistake this for “better colors,” but in truth, it’s simply an inaccurate color space.

In Photoshop, you can simulate LUTs via Soft Proofing, but not system-wide in Windows.
Things are much simpler when Windows isn’t involved at all and the LUTs are handled directly inside the display—ideally with more than 10 bit precision.
Many professional displays can store multiple LUTs, allowing you to switch color gamuts depending on your current needs.

I personally work mostly in DCI-P3, since nearly all modern smartphones use it as their standard gamut. If someone views my images on an sRGB panel or an undefined wide-gamut display, the result still looks balanced—saturation and color balance remain acceptable. For me, that’s the best compromise—and as long as you’re working in color-managed applications, DCI-P3 is an ideal working color space today.

A practical tip:
When working with dark images, don’t pull black all the way down to 0—lift it slightly, for example to 3. This prevents OLEDs or other panels from “crushing” the shadows, making the image look more natural.
In the film industry, it has long been standard practice not to work from 0 to 255, but to stay slightly above these limits—among other reasons, to avoid clipping issues with projectors and certain display technologies.



Nov 10, 2025 at 12:38 PM
EB-1
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p.1 #6 · How do I color calibrate a TV?


A decent TV can calibrate well enough for most purposes. It's not an Eizo, bENQ, etc, but so what if it is not used for soft proofing. I'm not sure why you cannot calibrate both separately, but maybe the bENQ software only supports that brand and you need some other software to support the TV on that port of your graphics card.

EBH



Nov 10, 2025 at 06:55 PM
vbnut
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p.1 #7 · How do I color calibrate a TV?


EB-1 wrote:
A decent TV can calibrate well enough for most purposes. It's not an Eizo, bENQ, etc, but so what if it is not used for soft proofing. I'm not sure why you cannot calibrate both separately, but maybe the bENQ software only supports that brand and you need some other software to support the TV on that port of your graphics card.

EBH


Yeah, AFAICT BenQ's Palette Master Element software only supports BenQ SW series monitors. Since I'm already using the Calibrite ColorChecker Display Pro, maybe I should try the Calibrite PROFILER software and see if can I use it to calibrate the TV.



Nov 10, 2025 at 10:19 PM
q-w-z
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p.1 #8 · How do I color calibrate a TV?


Calibrate it like usual display (resetting all TV-specific funny stuff - as neutral as possible, w/o all dynamic contrast and similar features. Some also suggesting enable Input Signal Plus feature).
Then you can use DisplayCAL to calibrate and bind resulting ICC profile to this TV.



Nov 11, 2025 at 01:38 AM







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