Hi, I recently realized that the gamma appearence is depending on your viewing condition. Take this into consideration, DisplayCal could generate calibration with specified ambient light level. This is very useful because without considering it, the sRGB curve would looks faded and whitish when viewing in a completely dark room. After set ambient luminance to 0.2lux, this apperance issue could be solved by altering the sRGB curve to approx. gamma 2.88. But the overall curve is different from a pure Absolute Gamma 2.88 w/ black output offset 100% (or any other offset level). I believe this curve may match human's perception better. (see attached)
So I wonder if there could be a option that only apply the calibration curve generated by DisplayCal without a certain gamma target? I suppose it would not be very hard, since all the things are almost the same but just don't take the response curve of the screen in the icc profile into account.
Hi, I recently realized that the gamma appearence is depending on your viewing condition. Take this into consideration, DisplayCal could generate calibration with specified ambient light level. This is very useful because without considering it, the sRGB curve would looks faded and whitish when viewing in a completely dark room. After set ambient luminance to 0.2lux, this apperance issue could be solved by altering the sRGB curve to approx. gamma 2.88. But the overall curve is different from a pure Absolute Gamma 2.88 w/ black output offset 100% (or any other offset level). I believe this curve may match human's perception better. (see attached)
So I wonder if there could be a option that only apply the calibration curve generated by DisplayCal without a certain gamma target? I suppose it would not be very hard, since all the things are almost the same but just don't take the response curve of the screen in the icc profile into account.
Thank you very much for your good tool!