Do your comments about your T series display imply that its brightness
can be reduced to the vicinity of the recommended 120 Cd/m^2?
Chuck Norcutt
Stephen Scharf wrote:
> MIke,
> You're correct, AFAIK, in that the T models are a higher
> specification than the B models. But I couldn't
> tell you exactly in what respect. The contrast ratio on my 215 TW is
> 1000:1, so blacks and whites
> certainly appear black and white. It makes my LaCie CRT look almost
> dingy by comparison.
>
> Regarding taking a while to get your profile for printing right, it
> could be that you
> are having a monitor luminance/print brightness mismatch. Most people
> use too high
> a monitor luminance with LCDs since they are *so* bright, but this
> often exacerbates
> this mismatch. Most color management experts recommend a monitor
> luminance around 120 Cd/m^2 for LCDs as a
> starting point, which is well below the maximum luminance that most
> LCDs are capable of these days. Of
> course, YMMV. Profiling and testing is always the best policy. I am
> presuming that you have some sort of calibrator
> that you can use with your monitor to create a monitor profile.
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