Monitor Calibration and Colour Space - Particularly for those from the film world.

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koraks

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{Moderator's Note: This thread is intended as a repository for a bunch of digital colour posts that arose out of a thread about colour negative films, colour processes and rendition of colour.
That thread can be found here: https://www.photrio.com/forum/threads/colour-negative-film.192985/
As a result of the moving of posts, both threads may end up being a bit choppy and disjointed.
The discussion was in response to the following very interesting post, which shows examples of how negatives designed for and processed in ECN-2 chemicals print on RA-4 paper designed to be used with negatives designed for and processed in C-41 chemicals.
Somewhat analogous in some ways to using materials set up for one colour space, in another colour space}

Is this an accurate summary of what you are saying?

It's an accurate way of summing up what I experienced in my testing. I'm not saying it is fundamentally impossible to make color-accurate RA4 prints optically from ECN-2 negatives, but as far as I can tell, it would take considerable doctoring with complex color masks to get there. Not something I would consider worthwhile.

Hence my request for any examples he has from his 2 month's of work. That way we can see how sub standards the prints are so we can judge how substandard they are in our eyes.

That's a very fair request indeed and I agree wholeheartedly with you that 'beauty is in the eye of the beholder', and that it's up to anyone to decide what they find acceptable. I didn't scan everything I made in that period - actually far from it, but I did find some things I happened to have online anyway, here they come:

KVT1881_ECN2mp_CAII_01.jpg

This is a promising early experiment; Vision 3 50D in 'straight' ECN-2 developer according to Kodak processing parameters. This may seem to come out OK to some, which is mostly due to this being a low-contrast scene, so most of what draws our attention is crammed into a narrow density range and hence, we can print without crossover being a very apparent problem. However, note the lack of saturation in all the primaries. The mug is supposed to have a quite vibrant (but rather dark) blue print, and I guess we all know what a bell pepper looks like in reality. This initial test actually inspired me to give it a go with portraits; the inherently 'toned down' look of ECN-2 seemed suitable for this to me.

EKVST1881_50DECN2_CAII_01.jpg

So here's one of the more successful portraits; again, this mostly works because of the narrow density range resulting from deliberately flat lighting. There still is a sickly greenish tint to the skin, which additional filtering would only fix at the cost of other problems (I tried), and more importantly the wall in the background was in reality neutral white...due to severe crossover issues, it doesn't render as underexposed white at all.

EPT_pH1050CDt3m45s_KEF99Y44Mw.jpg

This is a scene that more directly demonstrates the issue, with a deliberately chosen high dynamic range. This is something Vision 3 should excel in, but as you can see it doesn't translate well to an RA4 print. Note how we cross pretty much through the entire rainbow as we transverse the scene from dark to light. I actually made this as part of a pH and development time test series where I tried to doctor the ECN-2 curve by adjusting the pH. While the color balance did shift, the crossover problem did not go away at all; indeed, it seemed to help very little at all.

EC1911_CS800T_FCAL_04.jpg

Of course, one could exploit the crossover issue artistically as I did here, deliberately filtering the print for a very warm, golden skin tone while keeping the shadows very cool. Problem is, of course, that you're basically stuck with this kind of thing; it's not something you can control. It's what the material gives you.

For more examples I'd really have to start digging and frankly I'm not sure if I can be bothered...I've had my say on the subject several times; it's up to those who want to experiment to decide if they feel it's worth their time. I do think the material has artistic merit in a way. But whenever people start off saying things like "ECN2 is pretty much like regular C41 film only better/cheaper/whatever"...well, I just don't see it that way. It's a different animal, and not an animal that was designed to mate with RA4 paper. That you can seduce them to create offspring, doesn't mean the offspring will be particularly pretty or nice to live with.

PS: in most of my experiments, I resorted to exposing Vison 3 50D at EI 32 or even 25 to get enough shadow density to get it to work sort of OK with RA4 paper. This will give a relatively (compared to C41) low-contrast image with somewhat decent shadow detail. For contrast comparable with C41 film, I would advise extending development time while remaining closer to box speed.

PPS: I don't think I saved my early experiments with developing Vision 3 50D in C41 developer, but the results were so abominable that I very quickly gave up on it. While ECN-2 developed film at least prints in somewhat believable colors, C41-developed film looked exactly what it was: cross-processed (and not in a pleasing way, to my eye).

Or Koraks is hitting some kind of edge case with the subject that they're shooting?

I tried natural light outdoors, indoors, sunlit scenes, shade, strobes...the works. See my examples above; the severity of the problems depend mostly on the contrast of the scene and more subjective factors such as what kind of color fidelity the viewer intuitively expects from shadows and highlights, so basically subject matter. But the technical phenomenon was at least for me unescapable.

Btw, I did show some of those same images to PE in our discussion on the subject, and in his polite and soft-spoken way, he didn't seem particularly pleased with the results or hopeful of substantial improvements.
 
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MattKing

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One last thing is worth pointing out - the possibility of color deficiencies in one's vision.

I have a very good friend who began the journey of experimenting with printing Ilfochrome just before the materials were discontinued. He had no end of trouble, because he is "colour blind".
Sometimes life is unfair!
I always qualify my observations about colour fidelity on computer screens, because so far I've been too cheap to invest in screen calibration hardware.
 
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Thanks. Something I generally recommend to new color printers (using enlargers, not digital) is to print a color ringaround of something representative of what they typically shoot. That is, all main color offsets in say, three increments of strength (3 × 6 = 18 variations). This makes a good reference for their future print corrections - no mistaking what a certain filter adjustment looks like.


Yep, there is a wide variation in color vision deficiencies - it's not as cut-and-dried as many people think. A lot if people don't realize it without being tested.

We used to screen people with the Farnsworth-Munsell 100 hue test (or whatever the exact name is). This is about the best test for someone being considered for a photo color correction job. It's essentially a bunch of small color test samples with only small color differences. They consist of a complete hue circle (starting and ending with the same color), in a sorta pastel kind of strength. The person being tested tries to arrange all of the color samples in the correct order. If they have any specific color "blindness" they won't be able do this in a certain color range (the colors look the same). And... they will have similar problems on the opposite side of the hue circle.

The test is especially good to see how well the person can discriminate between slight color differences. Some people are really bad at this, even if they don't have a specific color blindness. I used to think they were just being sloppy, but on repeat tests, being very careful, they really just could not do much better. On the other hand some people are very good at this - they're like that person many people know who can taste a certain restaurant dish and instantly know everything that's in it

Fwiw the color ringaround I mentioned could help someone "discover" a significant color vision issue. If they observe that one specific color, for example, doesn't change as much as the others this might suggest a color vision deficiency. (This assumes, of course, that the enlarger's filter dials are consistent.) It could also be pointing out a deficiency in the viewing light source.

I'm with you on the computer monitor issue. I would not want to fully trust the monitor until it has been proven to be fully adequate, for the purposes of making critical evaluations on an image to be printed. It's kind of a tricky situation. Now, for ballpark work, no problem, but for critical print work... I'd keep my skepticism.

There were color tests like that on the web that I tried and scored very well. Are those accurate enough to see whether you have problems or not?

I work with a calibratable monitor set for sRGB knowing I'll be putting the image on the web. I don't print much. I usually shoot chromes. After I scan them, I adjust the colors until they look correct and are acceptable to me. I assume they'll be acceptable to others. I don't compare back to the actual chrome film to see if the colors match. This is my picture. If I'm happy with the colors, then that's what counts. I don't have to match a color palette made for the film by some film manufacturer. That was their designer's interpretation.
 

MattKing

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I work with a calibratable monitor set for sRGB knowing I'll be putting the image on the web.

sRGB is just a colour space, it doesn't tell you whether the monitor is calibrated to render a particular colour in a particular way.
The hardware solutions actually measure the colour of the image being emitted by the monitor, and allow comparison with the reference source. They allow you to tell whether your monitor is displaying, e.g., the red in the reference, rather than, e.g., a slightly more yellow (red + green) version of the same.
Then you use the controls on the monitor or in the display system to adjust the monitor's output in order to match the reference.
The advantage of having a calibrated monitor is that it should display the same colour from the same file as another similarly calibrated monitor at the other end of the internet. And if you send out the file to a printer that has been similarly calibrated, the print that comes back to you should look like the image on your screen from the file.
I went into all this off topic detail, because there is a darkroom analogy - calibration of a monitor gives you something similar to using an appropriate evaluation light for your prints. An off calibration monitor will give you results similar to using a fluorescent light to evaluate your colour test prints. If you do that, and then view the final prints under a better light source, the final colour will end up just over-compensating for the deficiencies in the fluorescent light source - yech.
One calibrates a monitor to get a benefit similar to evaluating a print in light similar to the light which will be used to display the final product - each of the photographer and the viewer will see similar results.
 

MattKing

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Perhaps someone who has a bit more experience than me could start a thread on the subject of calibrated workflows in a digital sharing and printing world.
In an appropriate sub-forum, of course :smile:.
 
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sRGB is just a colour space, it doesn't tell you whether the monitor is calibrated to render a particular colour in a particular way.
The hardware solutions actually measure the colour of the image being emitted by the monitor, and allow comparison with the reference source. They allow you to tell whether your monitor is displaying, e.g., the red in the reference, rather than, e.g., a slightly more yellow (red + green) version of the same.
Then you use the controls on the monitor or in the display system to adjust the monitor's output in order to match the reference.
The advantage of having a calibrated monitor is that it should display the same colour from the same file as another similarly calibrated monitor at the other end of the internet. And if you send out the file to a printer that has been similarly calibrated, the print that comes back to you should look like the image on your screen from the file.
I went into all this off topic detail, because there is a darkroom analogy - calibration of a monitor gives you something similar to using an appropriate evaluation light for your prints. An off calibration monitor will give you results similar to using a fluorescent light to evaluate your colour test prints. If you do that, and then view the final prints under a better light source, the final colour will end up just over-compensating for the deficiencies in the fluorescent light source - yech.
One calibrates a monitor to get a benefit similar to evaluating a print in light similar to the light which will be used to display the final product - each of the photographer and the viewer will see similar results.

I mentioned I'm working with a calibratable monitor to let people know I'm calibrating the colors to some standard, in this case sRGB. If others watch sRGB with a monitor that's not calibrated to sRGB, that's their problem and I can't do anything about it.

But I have to start with some standard. Otherwise, if I use an unadjusted monitor to edit my colors, I will be the only one who sees those colors whether their monitors are calibrated or not.
 

MattKing

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I mentioned I'm working with a calibratable monitor to let people know I'm calibrating the colors to some standard, in this case sRGB. If others watch sRGB with a monitor that's not calibrated to sRGB, that's their problem and I can't do anything about it.

But I have to start with some standard. Otherwise, if I use an unadjusted monitor to edit my colors, I will be the only one who sees those colors whether their monitors are calibrated or not.

sRGB isn't a calibration - it is a colour space.
You need to take the extra steps to calibrate your monitor within sRGB in order to get your monitor to show the same way as someone else's sRGB monitor.
That is what those extra cost accessories allow you to do.
Same as viewing your colour darkroom under standardized viewing lights.
 
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sRGB isn't a calibration - it is a colour space.
You need to take the extra steps to calibrate your monitor within sRGB in order to get your monitor to show the same way as someone else's sRGB monitor.
That is what those extra cost accessories allow you to do.
Same as viewing your colour darkroom under standardized viewing lights.

I calibrate my NEC PA242W monitor with SpectraView II to sRGB using a puck. I could calibrate it to Adobe or other color spaces. But I don't print and just post to the web right now. Hence I use sRGB.
 

MattKing

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I calibrate my NEC PA242W monitor with SpectraView II to sRGB using a puck. I could calibrate it to Adobe or other color spaces. But I don't print and just post to the web right now. Hence I use sRGB.

No, you use the SpectraView II to calibrate to a profile within sRBG.
If others calibrate their monitors to the same profile, within sRBG, their monitors will display like yours.
And if they calibrate to a different profile within sRBG, their monitors will display differently.
The hardware in the puck allows the calibration to be objective.
My displays are also set to sRBG, but I only make use of the "calibrate by eye" utilities available to me, so my calibration profiles are less accurate than yours, and more subjective - my displays' characteristics are unlikely to match yours exactly.
Sort of like two darkroom printers who print and then examine the results under lights of slightly different characteristics.
 
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No, you use the SpectraView II to calibrate to a profile within sRBG.
If others calibrate their monitors to the same profile, within sRBG, their monitors will display like yours.
And if they calibrate to a different profile within sRBG, their monitors will display differently.
The hardware in the puck allows the calibration to be objective.
My displays are also set to sRBG, but I only make use of the "calibrate by eye" utilities available to me, so my calibration profiles are less accurate than yours, and more subjective - my displays' characteristics are unlikely to match yours exactly.
Sort of like two darkroom printers who print and then examine the results under lights of slightly different characteristics.

You just confused me. Isn't profile and color space the same?
 

Mr Bill

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No, you use the SpectraView II to calibrate to a profile within sRBG.

Hi, a little more accurate to say that it GENERATES an ICC profile which is then used. Such a profile acts as a 3-d lookup table used when the image is displayed on the monitor.

For example, say that your image is in the sRGB color space, where every set of RGB values represents a definite color. The monitor profile essentially says, to cause the monitor to show that specific "definite color," the RGB values need to be changed to another set of values, based on the series of tests done with the puck in place. Now, the original image is not changed, only the display version being done on-the-fly.

It IS necessary for the monitor to be in a stable condition, same condition as when the monitor was profiled. And this is what a "calibration" should do - get the monitor to that same stable condition.
 

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Can't we end this digital calibration disccussions?
 

AgX

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Matt offered, if I undestood him right, to transfer these to new thread in the digital section.
 

MattKing

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As posted at the beginning, this thread is intended as a repository for a bunch of digital colour posts that arose out of a thread about colour negative films, colour processes and rendition of colour.
That thread can be found here: https://www.photrio.com/forum/threads/colour-negative-film.192985/
As a result of the moving of posts, both threads may end up being a bit choppy and disjointed.
 
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MattKing

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For those who are more attuned to the world of digital displays, please feel free to extend and improve this thread.
 

Mr Bill

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For those who are more attuned to the world of digital displays, please feel free to extend and improve this thread.

I like to think I'm pretty conversant with this, but it can get pretty deep. Are there any parts in particular anyone is wondering about?
 

Mr Bill

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You just confused me. Isn't profile and color space the same?
No. Color spaces can exist independently of computer systems.

But, as user Artist-Photographer suggests, you can have an ICC profile that conforms to some color space. For example, sRGB is a color space; it has three defined illuminants as well as a "white point." (The illuminants are equivalent to the red, green, and blue phosphors used in 1990s television sets, as I recall.)

But there are also sRGB color profiles. You would need of these profiles in order to work with sRBG on your computer. (Your computer probably came with an sRGB profile installed.)
 
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My head is starting to hurt. Now I'm really confused. Please keep it simple for this old man.

Here's the scenario. I don't print. I currently only post to the web, display on my monitor, or 4K TV, or provide slide shows to family and friends on DVDs or memory cards. They play on their equipment, calibrated or not.

I use a monitor calibrated to sRGB to edit my photos (scanned film or digital photos) and video clips. I use sRGB because I heard that the web mainly uses that. I use my eyes to get colors that are acceptable to me. I don't try to match the original film colors. I save images as jpegs reducing their resolution to let's say 1400bpi wide. I send it to Flickr or here or another place on the web. For memory cards to display on TV or give to the family on a DVD, I use jpegs of full resolution.

So here are my questions:

1. Will other viewers who have calibrated their monitor to sRGB "see" the same colors that I see in my photo?

2. Is this true for both those looking at the photos on the web and those looking at the photos from the DVDs I gave them?

3. If I calibrated my monitor to let;'s say Adobe, and then sent them to the web, would the colors look different than what I saw on my monitor?

4. If I calibrated them to Adobe, what would my family see of the DVDs I sent them?
 

MattKing

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Now do you see why I wrenched this separate thread into being?
I work so rarely with this stuff, so it shouldn't be me who tries to make things clearer. In fact, there is a really good chance that if someone steps in and helps, it will help me as well, because all the explanations I've seen seem to me to be so full of jargon and circular language as to sound more like alchemy than science.
But to perhaps help Alan a little bit, here is one thing that seems to work for me - an analogy of sorts.
A colour space is sort of like a colour family found at the paint store. If you go to a Benjamin Moore store, for example, and look at their Historical Colours collection colour palette, the entire range of colours is sort of like a colour space - a selection and range of colours.
You don't "calibrate to a colour space". The "colour space" just provides the range of colours available and, I think, something about how the different colours within the space are distributed (not totally sure about this part).
The calibration part is more related to how your monitor is adjusted in order to make sure that when it is asked to display a set of pixels of a particular colour, that it actually displays that colour, and not something close but different.
 

Sirius Glass

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Years ago I started down this rabbit hole and gave up in despair. It may have gotten clearer and simpler to do, but once I gave up, that was it. I realize that screen calibration is important but now I choose to just not bother since I do not print digitally. Best of luck digging through the details of getting correct on your monitors.
 
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Thanks Matt for the explanation. But I don't think it answered any of my four questions. Can you or anyone else answer them?


1. Will other viewers who have calibrated their monitor to sRGB "see" the same colors that I see in my photo?

2. Is this true for both those looking at the photos on the web and those looking at the photos from the DVDs I gave them?

3. If I calibrated my monitor to let;'s say Adobe, and then sent them to the web, would the colors look different than what I saw on my monitor?

4. If I calibrated them to Adobe, what would my family see of the DVDs I sent them?




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