Blackthorn
"hello?" "this is vagina"
Kinda shocking to me that on GAF, the forum that scrutinises image quality like no other, so many people are happy with wildly inaccurate displays.
For movies and TV Warm 2 is the standard that producers author the movies/tv shows in. They recommend Warm 2 as does every single profession calibrator does as well.
Go with what your own eye balls say, what does it matter what anyone else thinks. I know people like to honor the original directors. But at the end of the day your own opinion should matter most.
Lol, why?
Kinda shocking to me that on GAF, the forum that scrutinises image quality like no other, so many people are happy with wildly inaccurate displays.
Natural light (the sun) is the same anywhere on the planet. It's not more orange in Mexico and it's not bluish in Alaska. Warm with some tweaking is still going to look closer to natural lighting on a sunny day.
Go with what your own eye balls say, what does it matter what anyone else thinks. I know people like to honor the original directors. But at the end of the day your own opinion should matter most.
No, because this supposes that cloud cover doesn't exist, the earth doesn't rotate, and that the earth does not go around the sun, when in all fact all three of those moderate how daylight is perceived at different latitudes at different times of year.
Because movies and games are calibrated from the same reference point, 6500k
I hope you're not using Cool temperate at night times though, that's bad for your eyes
Not really shocking. Too few people even make a noise about crushed blacks in Xbox One OS and games. This console was released in 2013 and it's still not fixed. And this is a consumer media device that should be all about industry standarts. Last time i checked everything was messed up in that OS even YouTube app, picture viewer and web browser.Kinda shocking to me that on GAF, the forum that scrutinises image quality like no other, so many people are happy with wildly inaccurate displays.
Natural light (the sun) is the same anywhere on the planet. It's not more orange in Mexico and it's not bluish in Alaska. Warm with some tweaking is still going to look closer to natural lighting on a sunny day.
Kinda shocking to me that on GAF, the forum that scrutinises image quality like no other, so many people are happy with wildly inaccurate displays.
While this is true, you shouldn't be changing the colour temperature of your display as some sort of post white balancing.
I went with the Warm2 for movies/TV because that was recommendation and I've loved that even though at first it seemed Yellow.
I noticed the Yellowing too much with PC/console gaming and changed it to Cool. It does looks a bit blue until I tweaked it to look more white. It is a bit bright and I keep tweaking to fix that, but am pretty happy with my settings overall.
It hasn't hurt my eyes yet, though I do have impaired vision. I'm open to change if you have recommended setting you can offer or point to for Samsung KS8000 (US)
Of course, but its why displays have customisable temperatures and why "Warm 2 is what they use in hollywood!" isnt a one size fits all solution.
I just can't get on with this, it makes whites look yellow.
Apple devices tend to come fairly well calibrated by default, at least in terms of colour temperature and gamma, so most people at this point must have encountered decent calibration that would be much better than cool colour settings on TVs.It's not really that surprising. You have to be exposed to a well calibrated display, and then notice there is a difference. There are a huge number of people here that can't even notice the difference between 30hz and 60hz. Even then calibration is not free unless you have a friend that will do it for you. Also every image people here view is through a display that might not be calibrated and thus nothing will look wrong unless it's really off.
6500k actually describes a range of colors of white. D65 is a specific color of white that is equivalent to 6504k, but since 6504k is a range of colors of white 6504k is not necessarily equivalent to D65. Calibration requires instrumentation. If you don't hardware calibrate a display, then you haven't calibrated a display.
My credentials up front: seven years of professional VFX and video game work, including colour grading for feature films and colour work on both in-game content and game cinematics.
Mostly echoing what's already been said: 6500k. Ideally you'd use a professional colour calibration tool, but you still need to declare what temperature is considered "neutral" during calibration. That temperature is 6500k.
There are some situations where you might want to tweak that, like if you have weird ambient light around your screen throwing you off, but 6500k is "correct".
Just for clarification, D65 is another term for 6500k -- so if you're trying to figure out what preset is closest to the "correct" temp, see if you can find info on what preset is equivalent to either "D65" or "6500k". Hopefully you'll find someone that mentions either one or the other.
PSY・S;219405809 said:What about RGB vs YCbCr?
Thanks.You have a KS8000? Sweet.
If Warm 2 feels too yellow, then it's probably not 6500k. Sadly with this sort of calibration, while some screens are great with getting you as close to SRGB as possible, there are variances.
There's also the possibility that the warm colour of certain games is simply by design. The idea that there should be a difference between what you use for games and movies is preposterous and I'm really not sure why TV Manufacturers think this is a great idea.
Now the purpose of colour temperatures...
While I no longer have my monitor, I have a Surface Book which is where I view most of my content. I don't need to do any professional colour grading or anything, but out the box the Surface devices are brilliantly accurate. Despite that, I still use a program like f.lux (which warms the screen as the sun goes down) because blue light is really bad for you. I can only imagine how horrible it must be looking at bright HDR content with a cool colour temperature.
How does one get these kinds of settings? I'm looking around my monitor and TV settings and I have no idea what to do to set gamma to 2.2 or color to 6500k or any of that.
I go with neutral. Temps feel like awful filters to me, so I try and remove any type of preset temperature.
I just got a new TV, so I've been asking myself this question as I futz with the settings on all the different modes. I've noticed the defaults are all Warm 2, but that looks insane to me. This new LG 4K LED has a "Medium" setting, which is what I've been going with. Am I doing it all wrong?
Kinda shocking to me that on GAF, the forum that scrutinises image quality like no other, so many people are happy with wildly inaccurate displays.
No, because this supposes that cloud cover doesn't exist, the earth doesn't rotate, and that the earth does not go around the sun, when in all fact all three of those moderate how daylight is perceived at different latitudes at different times of year.
Natural light is not only different in different locations around the world, but it's also different at different times of day or times of the year in the same location. It's a principal cause of SAD (seasonal affective disorder) and using light bulbs with different color temperatures in your home can actually be an effective treatment for it.
This one thing I have always been confused about. People are saying warm is more realistic. And they have been saying that for decades. I don't argue that, but if not even the best displays can display what your eye can see, how can any of it of be realistic. Other then I a general statement that it closer when compared to other temps. As we are all learning now HDr and wcg gets use alot closer then ever before. But still has a long way to go.
speaking of display settings, is there a general preference between Game mode and PC mode?
Game mode on my Samsung is generally fine (and gives me more display options) but the PC setting completely disables that stupid auto-dimming feature so I'm leaning towards sticking with that.
68 Fahrenheit
I like it to match the thermostat
Unlike a lot of topics, there is actually an objectively correct answer for this question; D65, Rec. 709 and 2.2 gamma. Any other answer is incorrect.
Well unless it's about HDR and then it's; D65, Rec. 2020 and 2.2 gamma.
Your own eye balls are often very wrong, and there are enough optical illusion examples to make this abundantly clear.
Not really shocking. Too few people even make a noise about crushed blacks in Xbox One OS and games. This console was released in 2013 and it's still not fixed. And this is a consumer media device that should be all about industry standarts. Last time i checked everything was messed up in that OS even YouTube app, picture viewer and web browser.
Kinda shocking to me that on GAF, the forum that scrutinises image quality like no other, so many people are happy with wildly inaccurate displays.
Apple devices tend to come fairly well calibrated by default, at least in terms of colour temperature and gamma, so most people at this point must have encountered decent calibration that would be much better than cool colour settings on TVs.
I've always assumed that's a big reason why people like Apple products without them necessarily realising it. A friend of mine was complaining that his Macbook looked better than any monitor he had no matter what he did, then I pushed him to a Dell IPS, and he saw the (6500k) light.