![]() ![]() And it will match a print set up in an appropriate viewing station very well. ![]() Hi Andrew, Yes, my monitor is in fact calibrated. This may not be your problem but at least it's something to do as a reality check on your edits. From there I could push downward toward black to provide shadow definition and upward for the rest of the viewable detail that could be seen in a print lit by dim living room light. ![]() No one had brought this issue up in the past so I decided it needed to be addressed to the point I came up with a Lab readout number for minimum viewable shadow density for viewing prints in the lowest level of light that still conveyed the overall image. My problem had nothing to do with screen luminance to print viewing light parity but more to do with how a combination of viewing and editing on a brightly lit transmissive display of brightly lit/wide dynamic scenes affected my visual judgement on how bright or dark the scene should look. Here's another side of the coin to Andrew's "Prints Are Too Dark" link I raised over at Luminous Landscape that you might consider. ![]()
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