I have calibrated my monitor with an Eye one calibrator from Gretag McBeth. the white point of my monitor is 5500K and gamma 2.2, as advised by our photographer. We have calibrated our monitors here to match with their settings and to be able to see what they see. They explained and showed me that sRGB is a very limited color space, which in fact is true.
The GretagMacBeth calibrators are nice and you have it set up exactly right!
I also calibrated my printer with a hardware calibrator for two specific kind of papers and now my monitor image looks almost exactly like the printout.
Now I understand from this tutorial that I should set color management in Photoshop to sRGB right? Or am I misunderstanding the story?
Furthermore, you said to Flipside that his colors look washed out because colors and textures were not set for linear workflow. But if I follow your settings and open a texture in max that I created in Photoshop they look completely different. How do you deal with this then?
I will reply to this later when I am at work.
Can you show us some work that is created using this workflow that shows a more photographic result as you say?
Trixian
One thing I'm curious about is why a gamma adjustment of 2.2. When I fiddle with the spinner in max's gamma tab, I set it to what looks like an even match between the grid and the centre box. I end up with a value of 1.74. This kinda confuses me. In addition to this, what about icc profiles assigned to monitors in the monitor set up part of windows?
It might be wise to get the GretagMacbeth calibrator for a good setup.
It will generate a proper ICC profile if you tell it 5500k sRGB.
Flipside
Since my photoshop is messed up here at home, I will need to check this at work.
rob
Comment