Aug 09, 2021 The Amtast colorimeter which we are highlighting now is suitable for the printing industry, coating industry as well as for testing various objects. Also, the testing port diameter is 8 MM, which means that it can detect colors more easily. You can store ten sets of standards sample. In each set, the capacity is up to 100 samples. Wide-gamut display plus colorimeter on the other 1. I'm confused, and I certainly don't want to buy both. Maybe it helps to set this in context: I'm a somewhat enthusiastic hobbyist photographer, image quality is why I bought a DSLR and two primes, but I'm not a professional.
Overall, the SpyderX Elite is the best display colorimeter on the market.
- This topic has 8 replies, 3 voices, and was last updated 4 months, 2 weeks ago by .
Hi, I'm calibrating my monitor (Acer XF270HUA) using a ColorMunki Display. After reading the documentation, I see it says to use a colorimeter correction for the best results. I imported colorimeter corrections for my ColorMunki Display as well as checked the colorimeter corrections database and found a matching CCMX here. My question is, which one would be the best to use? I currently have my monitor calibrated with 'None' correction and using the sRGB settings. It looks great imo, but I wonder if it could be improved using one of the corrections. I've noticed that measuring the white point with the three different corrections (None, LCD White LED, AcerXF270HU by 4KM) gives different adjustments. I'll post a screen shot of each one, note: the screenshots were taken after calibrating my white point to the 'None' correction. Thank you in advance for anyone who helps me out and I'm deeply sorry if this has been asked before.
Attachments: You must be logged in to view attached files.i1Display Studio on Amazon
Disclosure: As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.In order of preference:
-CCSS from community and your particular display model (beware emulated gamut CCSS for some widegamuts, it is not your situation), unless it is a backlight type with narrow spikes in spectral power distribution and you have a 10nm CCS (not your situation)
-Bundled CCSS for yout backlight type (common sRGB WLED for your Acer AFAIK)I would avoid using 3rd party CCMX not made by you, or for your colorimeter (unit, not model) and your display.
So if there is no CCSS for your model, use generic WLED CCSS.
If after calibration you see some color tint in white (at the center, where you measured), you can use visual white point editor.Thank you for the help. I'm confused though, what's a CCSS? Where would I find a CCSS from the community? Sorry for my ignorance.
CCSS is a spectral power distribution sample for R,G, B channels and full white (emitted power per wavelegth ~ 'number of photons of each wavelength'). With this information since i1d3 colorimeters from Xrite store its own spectral sensivities in firmware is possible to compute an individual correction for each unit on the fly.
CCSS are 'generic' per display model so they can be shared, but this translates to individual colorimeter correction once loaded in displaycal for i1d3.If AcerXF270HU is a sRGB only LED display, default White LED CCSS bundles with DisplayCAL should do the job.
- This reply was modified 4 months, 2 weeks ago by .
Is it possible to add evidence in the court record in the same frame that you hide something from the court record?
This is in the place of updating evidence, since Im pretty sure you cant do that.
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Overall, the SpyderX Elite is the best display colorimeter on the market.
- This topic has 8 replies, 3 voices, and was last updated 4 months, 2 weeks ago by .
Hi, I'm calibrating my monitor (Acer XF270HUA) using a ColorMunki Display. After reading the documentation, I see it says to use a colorimeter correction for the best results. I imported colorimeter corrections for my ColorMunki Display as well as checked the colorimeter corrections database and found a matching CCMX here. My question is, which one would be the best to use? I currently have my monitor calibrated with 'None' correction and using the sRGB settings. It looks great imo, but I wonder if it could be improved using one of the corrections. I've noticed that measuring the white point with the three different corrections (None, LCD White LED, AcerXF270HU by 4KM) gives different adjustments. I'll post a screen shot of each one, note: the screenshots were taken after calibrating my white point to the 'None' correction. Thank you in advance for anyone who helps me out and I'm deeply sorry if this has been asked before.
Attachments: You must be logged in to view attached files.i1Display Studio on Amazon
Disclosure: As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.In order of preference:
-CCSS from community and your particular display model (beware emulated gamut CCSS for some widegamuts, it is not your situation), unless it is a backlight type with narrow spikes in spectral power distribution and you have a 10nm CCS (not your situation)
-Bundled CCSS for yout backlight type (common sRGB WLED for your Acer AFAIK)I would avoid using 3rd party CCMX not made by you, or for your colorimeter (unit, not model) and your display.
So if there is no CCSS for your model, use generic WLED CCSS.
If after calibration you see some color tint in white (at the center, where you measured), you can use visual white point editor.Thank you for the help. I'm confused though, what's a CCSS? Where would I find a CCSS from the community? Sorry for my ignorance.
CCSS is a spectral power distribution sample for R,G, B channels and full white (emitted power per wavelegth ~ 'number of photons of each wavelength'). With this information since i1d3 colorimeters from Xrite store its own spectral sensivities in firmware is possible to compute an individual correction for each unit on the fly.
CCSS are 'generic' per display model so they can be shared, but this translates to individual colorimeter correction once loaded in displaycal for i1d3.If AcerXF270HU is a sRGB only LED display, default White LED CCSS bundles with DisplayCAL should do the job.
- This reply was modified 4 months, 2 weeks ago by .
Is it possible to add evidence in the court record in the same frame that you hide something from the court record?
This is in the place of updating evidence, since Im pretty sure you cant do that.
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- This topic has 8 replies, 3 voices, and was last updated 4 months, 2 weeks ago by .
Hi, I'm calibrating my monitor (Acer XF270HUA) using a ColorMunki Display. After reading the documentation, I see it says to use a colorimeter correction for the best results. I imported colorimeter corrections for my ColorMunki Display as well as checked the colorimeter corrections database and found a matching CCMX here. My question is, which one would be the best to use? I currently have my monitor calibrated with 'None' correction and using the sRGB settings. It looks great imo, but I wonder if it could be improved using one of the corrections. I've noticed that measuring the white point with the three different corrections (None, LCD White LED, AcerXF270HU by 4KM) gives different adjustments. I'll post a screen shot of each one, note: the screenshots were taken after calibrating my white point to the 'None' correction. Thank you in advance for anyone who helps me out and I'm deeply sorry if this has been asked before.
Attachments: You must be logged in to view attached files.i1Display Studio on Amazon
Disclosure: As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.Must download software for mac. In order of preference:
-CCSS from community and your particular display model (beware emulated gamut CCSS for some widegamuts, it is not your situation), unless it is a backlight type with narrow spikes in spectral power distribution and you have a 10nm CCS (not your situation)
-Bundled CCSS for yout backlight type (common sRGB WLED for your Acer AFAIK)I would avoid using 3rd party CCMX not made by you, or for your colorimeter (unit, not model) and your display.
So if there is no CCSS for your model, use generic WLED CCSS.
If after calibration you see some color tint in white (at the center, where you measured), you can use visual white point editor.Thank you for the help. I'm confused though, what's a CCSS? Where would I find a CCSS from the community? Sorry for my ignorance.
CCSS is a spectral power distribution sample for R,G, B channels and full white (emitted power per wavelegth ~ 'number of photons of each wavelength'). With this information since i1d3 colorimeters from Xrite store its own spectral sensivities in firmware is possible to compute an individual correction for each unit on the fly.
CCSS are 'generic' per display model so they can be shared, but this translates to individual colorimeter correction once loaded in displaycal for i1d3.If AcerXF270HU is a sRGB only LED display, default White LED CCSS bundles with DisplayCAL should do the job.
- This reply was modified 4 months, 2 weeks ago by .
Is it possible to add evidence in the court record in the same frame that you hide something from the court record?
This is in the place of updating evidence, since Im pretty sure you cant do that.
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