She looked like an alien. All that was going through my head was,
“Oh ****.”
“But the photo looked perfect on my computer.”
“But I had checked, double checked.”
But, but, but it didn’t matter.
It was the final print, and her skin tones had a hideous greenish hue that just wasn’t supposed to be there.
It was one of my first times printing my works and as it turns out...
I had been working on an uncalibrated monitor for years.
Embarrassing.
It was minor enough to be overlooked by the editor and the magazine, but I couldn’t let it happen again. Since then, I learned to color calibrate my devices to make my prints look just like my photos when I finish editing them.
As a visual maker, it’s so important for viewers to see our art as we want them to see it (and avoid potential embarrassing mistakes!).
Whether you are creating prints to sell, sharing photos to your clients, or even just posting your art on Instagram, calibrating your monitor will create a more standardized picture across all mediums.
If you’ve never calibrated your monitor before, you’ll be shocked at how different your photos look. Here’s how you do it.
Color Calibration
There are two ways to calibrate your monitor:
- By eye
- With hardware
Calibration by Eye
Most computers nowadays come equipped with color calibration software that’ll allow you to adjust your monitor’s gamma, brightness and contrast, and even color balance.This gives you the ability to calibrate by eye.To an extent.Here are the pros and cons:Pros- Cheaper
- Will never be accurate no matter how hard you try
- Can be time-consuming
Reviewing Your Workspace
- Sweet, sweet ambient lighting is your friend here. No harsh shadows or light reflecting off your monitor is a must.
- Allow your eyes to adapt to the gray color balance by adjusting your lighting so it’s dimmer than your monitor.
- Choose a room where your walls are neutral colored. If you work on a bright colored wall, your eyes and brain will be conflicted between the perception of colors. In this case, a cave-like room might work best!
Adjusting Your Settings
- Have a print made so you have something to base your adjustments on
- Start by setting the proper brightness on your screen. This is crucial because most monitors have factory settings that are way too bright. Combined with the fact that most monitors are backlit and you have a recipe for disaster if brightness isn’t correctly adjusted.
- Open up an all-white image on your screen
- Set your camera to F11, ⅛ SS, and ISO 200
- Fill your frame with the all-white image
- Adjust the brightness on your monitor until the exposure meter on your camera is dead center
- Open up your system color calibration
- You can do this searching “color management” on Windows
- Click the “Advanced” tab
- Click “Display Calibration”
- You can do this searching “color management” on Windows
- Follow your monitor instructions to adjust gamma and contrast (adjust your brightness too if you haven’t already)
- Put your print side-by-side with your monitor and adjust the colors on your computer to get as close as you can to your print
- Once you’ve made your adjustments, get another print made and adjust as needed
- Repeat as many times as necessary
Color Calibration by Hardware
Pros- Can be done in 10-30 minutes depending on your hardware
- Takes very little brain-power, a caveman could do it
- Accurate
- Good calibration can be costly because you’ll need a monitor + the hardware. If you don’t need the best of the best, a solid colorimeter will run for about $200
Investing in a Solid Monitor
A great monitor makes a difference. And while it is not completely necessary for great looking photos, the benefits and how affordable they can be definitely warrant at least a consideration.If you’re combing through the market for an accurate monitor for photo editing, here’s what to look out for.IPS Panel
Color Space
Screen Size and Resolution
Color Calibration Colorimeters
Colorimeters are amazing. They’ll give you near perfect display with almost zero effort. They usually come with two components:- The software
- And the hardware
Preparation Steps
- The lighting in your room will affect the calibration process. For best results, avoid any direct lighting onto your monitor. Your lighting should be more or less the same as when you edit.
- Sweet, sweet ambient lighting is your friend here. No harsh shadows or light reflecting off your monitor is a must.
- Allow your eyes to adapt to the gray color balance by adjusting your lighting so it’s dimmer than your monitor. The monitor should be the brightest thing you’re looking at.
- Choose a room where your walls are neutral colored. If you work on a bright colored wall, your eyes and brain will be conflicted between the perception of colours. In this case, a cave-like room might work best!
Calibrating Step-By-Step
- Start by warming up your display for about 30 minutes. This step is to ensure your monitor is as bright as it’s going to be when you photo edit.
- Open the software.
- Connect the calibration hardware by hanging it over your monitor.
- Set your white level to 120 cd/m2. This sets the brightness you’d like the colorimeter to calibrate and adjust to. 120 cd/m2 is generally “standard.” (meaning this will work fine for all situations, but can adjusted for optimal results)
- Set your whitepoint to 6500K to calibrate for images you intend to post on the web. If you’re printing, set your whitepoint according to the color temperature of your paper. (this setting sets the color temperature you'd like to calibrate to)
- Begin the calibration process.
- Leave your computer alone while your monitor is being calibrated.
- Save the profile and name it. The new calibration will be stored as an .ics file and will show up as a new International Color Consortium (ICC) Profile in the Color Management.
Calibrated and Beyond
Over time, monitors’ color temperature and screen brightness will gradually change (even Apple monitors!) so do a quick maintenance calibration every 2-6 weeks to keep everything fresh and accurate.Please note you can change between profiles. This is important because you’d want a different profile for when you’re editing for web use and editing for prints. (for prints you’d want a different profile each type of paper even)I hope this guide helps you to avoid any embarrassing mistakes and helped you learn more about monitor calibration. If you have any questions, please ask in the comments and I’ll do my best to answer.Emily May Gunawan from Sally & Emily photography duo was born in Sydney and raised in Jakarta, positioning her and her sister Sally to engage with both Western and Eastern worlds. Since establishing her career in 2012, they have gone on to work with global brands including Adidas, Tim Tam, to NYLON Magazine in a wide range of capacities both for print and digital publications as photographers, creative directors, to videographers. Sally & Emily’s images are fuelled by self-discovery and contemporary femininity, taking inspirations from their diverse cultural heritage and personal stories. View their works at www.sallyemily.comand follow the journey at www.instagram.com/sally_emily
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