My Macbook screen

squizza

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Hi guys

How would I calibrate my macbook screen without calibration software? I would like to put CS4 and Lightroom on here, but theres no point if the screen colours aren't right.

Kind regards

Sarah
 
Hi guys

How would I calibrate my macbook screen without calibration software? I would like to put CS4 and Lightroom on here, but theres no point if the screen colours aren't right.

Kind regards

Sarah

Hi, i don't know which Macbook you have, but you cab calibrate the Unibody MB screen to a certain degree.

System preferences - click displays, then the colour tab, you will then see a calibrate tab, click this & then that opens the calibration screen, from there you can either do the (default) basic calibration or click the Expert Mode tab, then just follow the instructions, again it's not a perfect solution, but i did mine & it's much better than it was.
 
I've just bought a Spyder3 Pro and I'm having the devils own job calibrating my iMac and MacBook Pro (unibody) so that they look the same. Have logged a ticket with DataColor but haven't had a response yet.

Even just calibrating the iMac I can't get decent colour matched printing (using a Canon IP4700 and correct profile for it).

To be honest I'm a bit ****ed off about it at the moment, the Spyder3 Pro was £100 and so far it wouldn't even make a good paperweight. :(
 
The profile mine was defaulted to was 'Color LCD'. Is that the best to use?
 
I used an Eye One Match 3 to calibrate my MBP - doesn't work anywahere near as well as I'd have hoped; contrast is different to the CRTs we've calibrated using it and so is the overall screen brightness, meaning what I think is spot-on on my MBP is actually a stop or so underexposed.

I'm judging everything by eye these days - most reliable calibrator I've used.
 
If you go into System Preferences and click on displays there is a sort of calibration routine which does a "Reasonable Job"

The problem with laptop displays is there isn't a control that allows you to adjust the screen colour quality as you can with external monitors. With the Macbook, there is a discrepancy with the gain in the green and blue channels.It can't drive the LED's hard enough. It gives the screen a warmer look than a properly calibrated monitor.

Now the internal calibration isn't bad, unless you need absolute accuracy, such as in a fully colour managed workflow. I wouldn't let this stop you using either Lightroom or Photoshop. Having said that if I neeed accurate work from my MBP I use an external monitor.

Not sure if it will work, well download the trials of both and see what you think
 
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