>>3733161>>3733334>>3733372>>3733374>all this about color shitCool, maybe you guys are smart.
Anyone smart able to tell me if I'm doing profiling for my scanner right?
Top left = VueScan scan with no profile. No icc. Color balance set to "None"
Top right = VueScan result with icc made using target. Color balance set to "None"
Bottom left = VueScan result with icc made using target. Color balance set to "Neutral"
Bottom right = VueScan result with icc made with target. Color balance set to "Manual"
Is top right the correct way?
I've got 2700K light in my room and I think it is driving me insane with how different shit looks on screen compared to real life. When I set my monitor to 5000K mode things look more as they do IRL but I'm still not really sure I'm doing this shit right.
In sRGB mode on my monitor factory calibrated to 6500K the bottom right looks the nicest at first glance but I have a feeling it's incorrect and way off from being true. Same with bottom left. If I go 5000K mode on my display and crank brightness up the top right looks nicest but should I have to change my monitor to 5000K to see things without a blueish tint or am I supposed to be adjusting white balance in the images themselves after profiling and scanning my shit? Or do I leave it as is and compensate with my monitor settings to warm the image, or do I go buy some 6500K room lighting so I don't see such a difference between the room ambient light and the monitor?
Scanning with a V600.
Monitor is Dell U2415
Standard mode is the factory calibrated one.
User mode is set to 100/100/100 RGB 35brightness/75contrast(native)
5000K is under color temp.
Currently my light bulbs are 2700K 80 CRI and 800 lumens each. Got two.