I think the advice to try Adobe Gamma first is sound. Clearly it doesn't
work for everyone, but it has worked rather well for my particular
equipment. It doesn't cost anything to try it. If it works, you save the
time and cost of other solutions. My prints match what I see on the
screen in color balance. In the usually darkish room with the computer,
they look a little darker than the screen, but I haven't changed that
since they look correct in better light.
By the way Tris, are you living in an alternate timeverse? Your computer
thinks it is March 3rd.
Moose
Tris Schuler wrote:
Thank you, Lama. Yes, I've used Adobe Gamma and several other similar
tools, but all this amounts to no more than bustle--it boils down to
by guess and by gum. <snip>
Tris,
The way I'm reading this, you already have Photoshop. Until you get
a spyder, you might as well calibrate your monitor using "Adobe
Gamma". <snip>
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