Monitor for Photo Editing
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Monitor for Photo Editing
*can this be moved to the tech forum? Posted here by mistake. Sorry *
Good Day,
I am not quite ready to buy a new monitor but I am in the near future. I am looking for a monitor that has awsome realistic color, very small dot pitch and very high rez. I know the high resolution part will be difficult but I'm hoping theres a monitor with a resolution comparable to my old crt.
This was the monitor I was previously using. Anything with comparable or better specs would be great.
http://www.pcworld.com/reviews/product/ ... wmgx2.html
20wmgx
Viewable Picture Size 20.1\"
1680x1050
dot pitch 0.258 mm
Contrast Ratio 1600:1
Viewing Angle Hori/vert 178
Super-bright OptiClear DVM screen
technology <-- I really think that helped make the colors as nice as they are.
6ms
ps. Or I would wait for OLED screens. Can't wait for that tech to evolve. 7-10 years...
Good Day,
I am not quite ready to buy a new monitor but I am in the near future. I am looking for a monitor that has awsome realistic color, very small dot pitch and very high rez. I know the high resolution part will be difficult but I'm hoping theres a monitor with a resolution comparable to my old crt.
This was the monitor I was previously using. Anything with comparable or better specs would be great.
http://www.pcworld.com/reviews/product/ ... wmgx2.html
20wmgx
Viewable Picture Size 20.1\"
1680x1050
dot pitch 0.258 mm
Contrast Ratio 1600:1
Viewing Angle Hori/vert 178
Super-bright OptiClear DVM screen
technology <-- I really think that helped make the colors as nice as they are.
6ms
ps. Or I would wait for OLED screens. Can't wait for that tech to evolve. 7-10 years...
Fist off your contrast ratio is a bit low. For a 22\" your can get a 8000:1 along with 2ms for $180 USD.
I know you want really great hardware to make good work, but if you go to some schools you'll see some of the cheapest hardware create some really great work. In fact you'll find putting more money inside your chassis will allow more objects, higher resolutions will be more important.
Get a monitor color calibrator. After that you should be fine.
I know you want really great hardware to make good work, but if you go to some schools you'll see some of the cheapest hardware create some really great work. In fact you'll find putting more money inside your chassis will allow more objects, higher resolutions will be more important.
Get a monitor color calibrator. After that you should be fine.
Almost any monitor will do as long you invest into a color calibration tool like the Spyder 2. Don't even think that you'll get accurate colors w/o one..
That said, I'm fairly satisfied w/ my calibrated Samsung 245BW (24\", 1920x1200). I'm mildly interested in one of the higher end LED lit monitors, but until they come a long way down in price the Samsung does very well.
That said, I'm fairly satisfied w/ my calibrated Samsung 245BW (24\", 1920x1200). I'm mildly interested in one of the higher end LED lit monitors, but until they come a long way down in price the Samsung does very well.
If money is not object...
This is THE best monitor to date
The Sony OLED 17\". 10,000,000:1 contrast ratio.
This is THE best monitor to date
The Sony OLED 17\". 10,000,000:1 contrast ratio.
Re:
Buy 3 to build a tanning bed.Duper wrote:If money is not object...
This is THE best monitor to date
The Sony OLED 17". 10,000,000:1 contrast ratio.
Re:
What's with the comment that says the blue dies after 2 years?Duper wrote:If money is not object...
This is THE best monitor to date
The Sony OLED 17". 10,000,000:1 contrast ratio.
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Re:
Duper ^This^Quote^ = CLUELESSIsaac wrote:Buy 3 to build a tanning bed.
Cyclone : Grendel has the right advice for you
I seem to have a better workout dodging your stupidity than attempting to grasp the weight of your intelligence.
Heh, that OLED screen -- 11\" @ 960x540 ?! Cute
I get a fairly good color match betw. screen and printer (printer has a way bigger color gammut tho) using color profiles for both while working in Adobe RGB.
The monitor I was eyeballing is the XL24. If I had to get a monitor right now I probably would end up w/ this (detail) or this one.
I get a fairly good color match betw. screen and printer (printer has a way bigger color gammut tho) using color profiles for both while working in Adobe RGB.
The monitor I was eyeballing is the XL24. If I had to get a monitor right now I probably would end up w/ this (detail) or this one.
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When OLED originally came out, they did have problems with the blue dying early. No idea on that monitor, but that is why they aren't that mainstream.
Though my old Zen MP3 player had one... it was a bit dim.
http://www.lagom.nl/lcd-test/ is the test I used... still pretty hard to get stuff perfect, especially since I run a 21\" Sceptre and a 20\" Dell, but they are fairly accurate after that test.
Though my old Zen MP3 player had one... it was a bit dim.
http://www.lagom.nl/lcd-test/ is the test I used... still pretty hard to get stuff perfect, especially since I run a 21\" Sceptre and a 20\" Dell, but they are fairly accurate after that test.
Thanks everyone for the links and sugestions. Grendal that link got me going in the direction I was hoping. Looks like I need to go to the high end professional monitors to be satisfied grrr.
Must have specs...
S-IPS/H-IPS (not sure the difference between the two but they are better then the other panel types, have great viewing angles and that is a must for photo editing)
0.26mm or smaller dot pitch. I find lcds grainy. It's been 4 years since I looked at any new lcds so maybe thats not an issuse these days but a smaller dot pitch should reduce the grainyness and be easier on the eyes?
Large gamut (high sRGB/Adobe RGB %, preferebly 100% for sRGB)
Responce time of 6 (grey-to-grey) but this doesn't matter as much to me.
I will post further thoughts after I go through 20+ links of monitors and reviews. Way too many choices. I wish there was a lcd that was good in every technical aspect but it seems you have to pick and choose what you want in a lcd or spend alot of money. I think the monitor is the most important piece of hardware, after all you're constantly staring at it all the time you're at the computer.
Must have specs...
S-IPS/H-IPS (not sure the difference between the two but they are better then the other panel types, have great viewing angles and that is a must for photo editing)
0.26mm or smaller dot pitch. I find lcds grainy. It's been 4 years since I looked at any new lcds so maybe thats not an issuse these days but a smaller dot pitch should reduce the grainyness and be easier on the eyes?
Large gamut (high sRGB/Adobe RGB %, preferebly 100% for sRGB)
Responce time of 6 (grey-to-grey) but this doesn't matter as much to me.
I will post further thoughts after I go through 20+ links of monitors and reviews. Way too many choices. I wish there was a lcd that was good in every technical aspect but it seems you have to pick and choose what you want in a lcd or spend alot of money. I think the monitor is the most important piece of hardware, after all you're constantly staring at it all the time you're at the computer.
I have used several LCD monitors in the last few years and the graininess isn't a problem unless you get a really cheap monitor. Dot pitch of 0.26mm or narrower would give you something nice and crisp at the monitor's native resolution. I still use CRTs and they suit me fine, and I do occasional photo editing and other graphic art work.
Ok I think I narrowed it down to 4:
HP DreamColor LP2480zx
http://h10010.www1.hp.com/wwpc/us/en/sm ... 48397.html
Nec MultiSync LCD3090W-BK-SV
http://www.necdisplay.com/Products/Prod ... 42d439b357
Lenovo ThinkVision L220x
http://shop.lenovo.com/SEUILibrary/cont ... 826C34447E
EIZO - CG221
http://www.eizo.com/global/iblick/spec/?id=CG221
HP DreamColor LP2480zx
http://h10010.www1.hp.com/wwpc/us/en/sm ... 48397.html
Nec MultiSync LCD3090W-BK-SV
http://www.necdisplay.com/Products/Prod ... 42d439b357
Lenovo ThinkVision L220x
http://shop.lenovo.com/SEUILibrary/cont ... 826C34447E
EIZO - CG221
http://www.eizo.com/global/iblick/spec/?id=CG221