Treatment of images with monitor
I am a graphic designer and work a lot with processing of images for printing (CMYK). As with editorial work of fashion, quality of treatment is very important.
I worked with the display of Apple Cinema Display, but I have difficulty with the LCD, the color and want to leave the corners of the screen are darker.
The monitor of the iMac 20" is also very bad, a contrast that is absurd pixel gray to appear in pure white. (Worked with the two calibrated).
I would like to have help from you with an indication of a good monitor for processing of images. And if possible, some indication of where to buy.
Re: Treatment of images with monitor
If you are not adapted in Apple Cinema is already the best. You do not have much place to escape :biggrin:
Re: Treatment of images with monitor
I will tell you that the Apple Cinema 20 has many problems.
What I had worked three bands of color ... if I put a whole page blank on the screen, it stayed with a blue stripe, another red and one green.
Result ... the colors would never equal in treatment (for this product is terrible).
In the U.S., Apple is responding to process by using low-quality material on the screen iMac 20".
The Dell does not offer good solutions?
Re: Treatment of images with monitor
Try the Apple Cinema 24, You have to go in and give physical store take a look, take some photos in Pendrive pro seller and asked to see. Perhaps this particular model then you have this problem.
If you do not have at Apple, will have to seek a reseller of LaCie's or Eizo, or download an S-IPS display there from buying outside in the dark (like whether or not), unfortunately none of the big business of monitors (Samsung , LG, AOC, the rest of these marks is renamed) brings us such monitors.
One option is an LCD TV 32", those of LG and Philips, even as I know, are S-IPS. There are two things:
- Low Resolution pro size ... 1300 and some broken by 768.
- Lack of resources to calibrate the image of the computer, usually only has the simpler resources, brightness, contrast, etc. That is tricky to calibrate. Not impossible however.