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iPhisch

macrumors 6502
Original poster
Jun 22, 2010
357
84
Indiana
Simple question: what brightness percentage do you set for your screen when editing photos to get an accurate represtation for photo printing?
 

Apple fanboy

macrumors Ivy Bridge
Feb 21, 2012
57,000
56,024
Behind the Lens, UK
Simple question: what brightness percentage do you set for your screen when editing photos to get an accurate represtation for photo printing?
D65
100-120 brightness
2.2 tonal curve.
Of course you will need a calibrator to achieve this. No two screens are the same, so asking what % is about as accurate as asking what settings to take a photo in manual in my lounge.
 

iPhisch

macrumors 6502
Original poster
Jun 22, 2010
357
84
Indiana
OK, I'm way more amateur that that. I'm just doing this for fun with a nice computer. Just looking for a ballpark brightness percentage. So far I've been doing everything at about 75%.
Here's a photo I've been working on from my vacation last month. Apple Fanboy, you should appreciate this. Maybe you can give me your opinion. I want it to look vivid and plan on printing the final version at 12"x36" for my office. What do you think?
Original:
GGB%20Original_zpsupbhkcdt.jpg


Edited:
GGB_zpsrt55naxl.jpg
 

Apple fanboy

macrumors Ivy Bridge
Feb 21, 2012
57,000
56,024
Behind the Lens, UK
OK, I'm way more amateur that that. I'm just doing this for fun with a nice computer. Just looking for a ballpark brightness percentage. So far I've been doing everything at about 75%.
Here's a photo I've been working on from my vacation last month. Apple Fanboy, you should appreciate this. Maybe you can give me your opinion. I want it to look vivid and plan on printing the final version at 12"x36" for my office. What do you think?
Original:
GGB%20Original_zpsupbhkcdt.jpg


Edited:
GGB_zpsrt55naxl.jpg
I think its a nice image, but you have pushed the colours a little too far for my taste, but then the way I see colour will differ from the way you do. Also when you print it, I'm sure it will look different again. Probably will come out darker and more saturated, as thats the norm when printing from an Apple screen.
BTW I'm only an amateur myself. Calibration tools are not hard to use and can be pretty cheap. An entry level ColorMunki Smile will only cost around £67 on Amazon.
http://www.amazon.co.uk/X-Rite-Colo...d=1445074489&sr=8-1&keywords=colormunki+smile
 
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ryanide

macrumors 6502
Jul 23, 2002
292
31
When calibrated with an X-rite I-1 Display, my 2015 iMac 5K 27" is set to half or one tick less than half on the brightness scale. This puts the display brightness into the closest range for correct brightness.
 
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