05-26-2014, 04:13 PM
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So Fucking Banned
Industry Role:
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Montana
Posts: 46,238
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Quote:
Originally Posted by JustDaveXxx
Good solid advice. You know what your talking about.
Yes to a point if your good and shoot JPG. But not if you shoot RAW and implement your own color profile as I do.
Thats exactly what I do. You absolutely can't go wrong with that work flow.
99% of my customer base may not have calibrated monitors, but also keep in mind that same customer base are not working with exact color profiles that need to be graded with extreme accuracy.
Look at it like this: When you shoot RAW, there is no color profile. You must make your own in post production.
So If your monitor is more blue than it would be calibrated, and you try and warm up a photo, when your clients get it; he is going to think that you suck as a photog. Why Because the pic is going to be way to orange. And that happened because you over compensated for the uncalibrated Blue you saw in the monitor.
It happen to me 9 years ago with a one client. And I have had good friends get fired because they made color corrections based on uncelebrated monitors.
I run two 27 inch monitors, they are both calibrated and look identical. But the settings that make them match are not the same. Why? Every monitor is different and they all shift with in a month to one color or another. Thats why they need to be calibrated regularly.
If you shoot jpg, white balance, and light very well; you don't have to sweat monitor color calibration. Why? When shooting jpg, you can choose to have your color profile baked into the file and when your done shooting, your done. Down side; 8 bit color, less room to fix if you fuck up.
If you shoot RAW, color calibrated monitors are absolutely key. If you do any color calibrating or video color grading on content, color calibration is imperative. Why? RAW has no color profile baked into it and you still need to run the pics through post. Thats the downside I guess. But the upside is with RAW, even if you royally fuck up with your lighting, over expose, under expose, etc, the information is still there and you can recover and fix mistakes in post.
One last thing: jpg is 8 bit color. 10 bit color is double the colors of 8 bit. 12 bit color is double the colors of 10 bit. 14 bit is double the colors of 12 bit. 16 bit is double the colors of 14 bit.
Good cameras that I and other high end shoots are using are 14 and 16 and higher. Why would you ever want to shoot jpg?
Keep in mind when you add color or do color grading of any type, you are taking away information from the file.
I know this is a lot of info, but i thought I would share a bit about what I know about color and monitor calibration.
If its for business and you make money with it, Buy the very best Xrite color calibrating system you can buy. don't chinch out! The cheaper ones need to be replaced every 3 years or so. The good ones last a long time.
Hope that helps. I know my stuff when it comes to color and monitor calibration. Would love to hear what Dean Capture has to add. I know he knows his shit! lol
Just Dave
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great stuff David, I shoot jpg and have 14 years of images/jpg's online to look at if I think things are going south.... btw I shoot jpg because it's internet content. dvd's are color graded by the dvd writers. not my department. I now what I'm doing 
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