- 5,622
- eMadman
Calibrating your monitor is important because most monitors have a tendency to weaken certain color ranges and put too much emphasis on others. If you're an artist that works strictly on screen, it's not a *huge* issue, but it means that viewers will see different color ranges on their screen. For example, if your monitor has a strong green bias, you'll naturally compensate for that in your work. On other screens, the artwork show up with weak greens. On print, the results can be even worse since most people view colours similarly and don't have to rely on the interpretation provided by their video card/monitor.
For gaming, this is nice because it allows you to get more natural and realistic colours out of your games. It's realy something everyone should be doing
The reason I made this thread is because my Hyundai L90D+ LCD had slightly weak reds out of the box. Don't get me wrong, the screen is absolutely amazing, but I couldn't help but notice the weak reds. After a while of digging around and finding all sorts of pricey pieces of hardware, my friend sent me this freeware utility.
Did a great job for my screen and fixed up the reds. It should also do well for help darkening blacks on low end LCD's since deep blacks are something most lcd's have a hard time with.
Give the program a run. Post what you think of the results. It should be interesting to see if other people see a difference with this.
http://www.hex2bit.com/products/product_mcw.asp
For gaming, this is nice because it allows you to get more natural and realistic colours out of your games. It's realy something everyone should be doing
The reason I made this thread is because my Hyundai L90D+ LCD had slightly weak reds out of the box. Don't get me wrong, the screen is absolutely amazing, but I couldn't help but notice the weak reds. After a while of digging around and finding all sorts of pricey pieces of hardware, my friend sent me this freeware utility.
Did a great job for my screen and fixed up the reds. It should also do well for help darkening blacks on low end LCD's since deep blacks are something most lcd's have a hard time with.
Give the program a run. Post what you think of the results. It should be interesting to see if other people see a difference with this.
http://www.hex2bit.com/products/product_mcw.asp