Thanks for the suggestion!privatebydesign said:CTJohn said:Agree! I mostly use MPIX for my printing and the process is incredibly frustrating. I have a calibrated monitor turned down to 30% brightness, and it's way brighter than the first prints I get back from MPIX. I then go through round 2, upping contrast, brightness, and in some cases, saturation and send them back. The second prints can be OK, but often I need to do the process a 3rd time. So about 3 weeks after I've taken the image, I have a usable 4x6....then I order enlargements.privatebydesign said:In ideal circumstances yes everything you say is true, but even many professionals don't have that kind of work environment, almost no amateurs do, and that is one of the route causes for people being so unhappy with their prints.
Understand brightness and the difference between screen and print viewing and that, in my opinion, is the biggest hurdle to happy printing. Colour spaces, profiles, what manages colour etc are all just clicks of a button and easily repeated, but brightness isn't, and it is key.
It's even more frustrating when someone asks me to re-print a year later and I have to try to remember which one gave me the good print. I could be more disciplined creating "print" folders I guess.
I understand the difference between backlit and printed images, but wish someone could work out a simpler way of adjusting between the two.
CTJohn,
The solution to your issue is a print viewing booth or station. Off the shelf ones are very expensive, but all it needs to be is a neutral background close to white/very light grey, with a good full spectrum light source (there are some high quality bulbs that are very cheap nowadays) that can match your screen brightness, some baffles to help keep any extraneous light off the print helps too depending on ambient conditions. To test you can use your cameras meter, take a picture of a plain piece of photo paper in the viewing station, then with the same exposure settings take a picture of your screen when it displays a white screen. Adjust until they are the same.
Here is a DIY booth PDF
http://www.rgbcmyk.net/proofingbooth.pdf
Here is the Rolls Royce of lighting kits but there are some very good flourescent choices now too.
https://www.solux.net/cgi-bin/tlistore/colorproofkit.html
But even with a booth it is important to understand that your viewing conditions will be different to everybody else's! Prints live and die on the light that is cast onto them. Few people have their monitor and viewing station at the same WB, and generally this isn't too important, our eyes adjust for WB quicker than we can scan between the two images next to each other, but most lights are around 3,500ºK whereas most screens display around 6,500-5,000ºK.
Try using a 3,500ºK adjusted screen for anything but print evaluation and you will see why!
I'll still have the problem of my prints being darker than my display though, won't I? That seems to be the crux of my issue since I bought the Spyder.
Upvote
0