![]() ![]() It corresponds to whatever the monitor comes set to by (factory) default.Īlso, if I understand correctly, you are saying that I can set the RGB values of my monitor to whatever I like in order to reach a white color that seems “neutral white” to me, and this wont affect the calibration ?Įven though the Interactive Display Adjustment is NOT displaying Green check marks? That seems counter intuitive to me Thanks for the reply, just a clarification, what do you mean by native white? would that correspond to a value of 50/50/50 for my in-monitor RGB values? That’s fine as well and actually what you should be doing anyway (try to roughly match ambient light level for reduced eye strain). It may or may not improve the absolute accuracy of your colorimeter with your display.Īlso, I find the target 120cd brightness to be very low… so i aimed for 150cd… is there anything wrong with that? lightbox), there is no need to aim for any specific target whitepoint, and you can as well calibrate to native white (which is what the Displa圜AL defaults do).Īlso, if you’re using a colorimeter correction that was contributed by another user, please note its usefulness to your particular situation is up to you to evaluate. Unless you aim to match a specific reference white (e.g. Visually, most people tend to prefer colder (bluer) whites because they look brighter, but that doesn’t mean that a blue white is more (or less) correct. Im wondering if my i1display pro is defective or something?ĭuring the interactive display adjustment, could I set the RGB value so that I get a true white color (regardless of what the program tells me to change) and then do the calibration this way?Īlso, I find the target 120cd brightness to be very low… so i aimed for 150cd… is there anything wrong with that? ( having it at 120 makes the white even more ugly)… I tried showing my monitor to my friend, first with the displaycal profile, he said everything was fine, but then when I put my old profile and reset the RGB value of my monitor, he also agrees with me that my old manual settings seem more accurate, mainly again because of the whites… When I am doing the Interactive Display Adjustments, I need to tweak the RGB of my monitor and in order to get the bars to line up in the middle, I need to boost the green value much higher than the other colors, for example R54 G68 B53 … it feels wrong to my eye but, I continue the calibration anyways… In the end, when the profile is done, if I compare to my old settings, there is a huge difference… the whites dont look white anymore… Maybe its just me who got used to wrongly calibrated monitor, but, i cant help but feel something is off… There seems to be a light greenish/yellowish tint to the whites… After trying multiple different settings, number of patches, speeds, corrections, I just cant get it right… pretty much wasted most of my day trying to figure this out. It downloaded stuff for the instrument and also a correction for my display (Samsung S24A850DW, which is supposed to be 100% srgb, Led IPS (or more precisely PLS))… I just bought a i1 display pro and installed displaycal. ![]() I’ve never calibrated monitors before using an instrument (did it manually before). ![]()
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