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#14141 | |
Gaming Moderator
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Pro calibration is definitely the way to go if you can afford it, but not everybody can. |
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#14142 | |
Blu-ray Baron
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The calibration DVDs allow you to set contrast, brightness (more appropriately should be called black level), sharpness, saturation, and tint. Setting saturation can be tricky unless you can turn off two of the three primary colors of your display. Without using a meter, people tend to have saturation bumped up a bit too much. The blue filters that are sometimes included will oversaturate slightly. I usually tell people just using this disc to look at some reference quality skintones sometimes contained on the disc to set saturation. On some newer displays within Movie mode, it is sometimes set pretty well (50ish). However, after that: greyscale, color primaries and secondaries, and gamma all need professional calibration (or well skilled DIY) with a quality meter (no less than i1pro). Greyscale is crucial because it is in essence the "skeleton" or foundation of the image. If this is off, so is everything else. It's also the key to achieve color neutrality and white. Some displays can come somewhat close out of the box (but never as close as calibration) within Movie modes, but drift occurs on all displays and eventually requires re-calibration over time. LEDs drift slower than plasma - not sure where OLEDs stand. Lamp-based projectors drift relatively fast especially with greyscale as the lamp and panel ages...one reason while I look forward to a laser-based projector down the road. A properly calibrated 6500K image has a very natural look that is quickly distinguished among non-calibrated displays once your eye gets used to it. Even my girlfriend who is not a videophile can see the difference on my displays and my former calibrated display (Panasonic 65" ST30) I gave her. When she sees her family's displays or those at Best Buy, etc. their faulty look stands out like a sore thumb to her. Last edited by HeavyHitter; 08-15-2015 at 08:41 PM. |
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Thanks given by: | Geoff D (08-15-2015) |
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#14143 |
Blu-ray Grand Duke
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Honestly the test patterns on any early Sony release are more than adequate to set brightness, contrast, color, sharpness and backlight. I never saw the point of a DisneyWOW type disc because it doesn't do any more than that without a meter anyway.
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#14146 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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I thought it was, yes. For my part, I intended it as such. What is it exactly I'm supposed to "get over"?
You did make a flat statement as fact, and characterised people's responses as "obsessive". The whole site is "obsessive", if you start going down that path! ![]() I'm not "undermining" the importance of calibration. (I'm not even sure what that means.) I've said absolutely nothing against it or to dismiss it, only to argue against the dismissal of this issue as merely one of calibration. If it were just a matter of calibration, then the other films in the set would look problematic to those people as well, but no-one's saying they are. Or the footage from the first film that crops up in the second, where it looks spectacularly different. Clearly there's something objective about the colour grading in the first film that has nothing to do with the display it's viewed on. And I haven't dismissed the issue of screencaps generally -- though I am bemused by the fact that often the same people who rubbish them in one instance will lean on them as support for their argument in another. And I agreed with you in your comments on the importance of calibration, but it's not an invalidation of those comments to say they don't explain what's happened with this disc. You seem to be trying to position me as oblivious of the technical aspects, when that's far from the truth and not at all in keeping with what I'm saying. There *is* a problem with the transfer -- yes, it's clearly better than the BD of the cinema version in many ways, but the colour grading is just as big an issue off in a different direction as the loss of clarity and detail was in its predecessor -- and it's not resolved by telling people to "get over it". Myself, I just hope that the (inevitable?) re-release after the third Hobbit flick's EE comes out brings us a re-re-mastered transfer. It may even require them to go back to original elements and re-composite, but hopefully they'll offset that cost with the knowledge that pretty much everyone who's already bought it -- even those who say there's nothing wrong with the version we have now -- will go back to the well and pay for another dip into cleaner water. |
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#14147 |
Blu-ray Grand Duke
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Unless you put your color temp on cool or messed with the color settings a lot you're seeing the same picture everyone else is, roughly. The issue is different people have different levels of pickiness about such things. Yes, I know Fellowship has a green tint now. I just think it's subtle and not that big a deal. Others obviously think it's so bad they choose to watch the DVD.
Everyone is different and is bothered to different levels by different things. That's one reason forums like this even exist, so people can discuss these differences of opinion. |
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#14148 | |
Blu-ray Baron
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![]() The only thing I stated as fact was rec 709. The loudest complaints of these issues are often from people who are not watching on properly calibrated displays. Some discs are more sensitive than others especially if we are talking delicate shadow details which are easily crushed, or colors which border or blue vs teal, etc. It really just depends on the source. But still...I will repeat it again: if your display is not calibrated to rec 709, you are NOT seeing what's on the disc. Screencaps are absolutely useless for color if the monitor they are being viewed on is not calibrated. That is probably 99.99% of all monitors. They are more useful looking for DNR, EE, and grain structure - but even then apparent grain structure issues on caps may not even be evident during real viewing. And even so, as has been brought up, how our eyes perceive issues going back and forth on A/B caps on a monitor is different than watching the movie in all aspects. Screencaps need to be kept in proper context - a context that is often lost. I'll ask again since you evaded my question: have you watched this disc on a professionally calibrated display? If so, what kind of display, meter, and software was used? Thanks. Last edited by HeavyHitter; 08-16-2015 at 02:28 PM. |
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#14149 |
Blu-ray Archduke
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Excuse me. I'm looking for a deadhorse for the purpose of beating it. I was told that I could probably find one in this thread. Can anyone point me in the right direction?
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Thanks given by: | Doctor Jack (08-16-2015), HeavyHitter (08-16-2015) |
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#14150 | |
Blu-ray Baron
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#14151 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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I haven't "evaded" your question, HeavyHitter. You just make it very clear there's no point in stepping into your attempt to reframe the issue. Again, calibration may affect how some people see the film, but it's not the source of the problem. Neither are screencaps (which I didn't bring into the conversation; you did).
I love how you immediately tried to side with Petra's post, when in fact you're the one who started this with a sweeping misstatement. (By the way, Petra, you're free to talk about anything you want any time.) So I'll finish my participation by repeating what I said in my last post: the thing that would make me double-dip on LotR in the anticipated new re-releases would be a remastering of Fellowship to address the colour grading and luminosity issues. I'd be interested in seeing how many of the people who currently trot their "bah humbug!" out over and over would do the same. |
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#14152 | |
Blu-ray Baron
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Thank you for essentially answering my question. You obviously have not seen this disc on a properly calibrated set-up and that's fine; but you're being very closed-minded in not considering how this disc could look on a display calibrated to rec 709 IN MOTION - to be able to see this disc how it was INTENDED to be seen. You have NOT experienced this, yet claiming the disc is flawed. Hmmmm. Interesting perspective. At least consider this before dismissing the disc as a failure. If you lived close by, I would sincerely invite you over to watch this disc at 124" on my JVC front projector as I can almost guarantee you would be impressed, overall, with the disc and that the color "issues" are hardly anything you are judging it to be. ![]() Last edited by HeavyHitter; 08-16-2015 at 03:23 PM. |
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#14153 | ||
Blu-ray Ninja
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Just when I think I'm out, they pull me back in ...
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I've agreed with you specifically all along about the value of calibration. I specifically disagree with you that alleged lack of calibration is what caused this to be an issue. There's no evidence that is true, and significant evidence to the contrary. Professionals as well as home-watchers all over the world have commented on it. As I said at the start, if you can't see it, then fair enough. |
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#14154 |
Blu-ray Grand Duke
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I'll disagree on pro-calibration. It's largely a waste of money for a modern LCD if you use the tools available like a calibration disc and AVS tools. LCD have improved a loooooot over the years. They have a strong color mode that matches d65 out of the gate most of the time, and the rest of the time are close enough now.
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Thanks given by: | GaragePoet (08-16-2015) |
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#14156 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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granted, if you're using programmed settings on your TV, you could take a few mins. to make things a whole lot better. i've used a calibration disc to try to get the settings to where i like them. but people here often act like unless you spend hundreds of dollars having your screen professionally calibrated, you can't tell the color blue from the color orange, etc. it's snobbery at its absolute worst... |
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Thanks given by: | StingingVelvet (08-16-2015) |
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#14157 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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#14158 | |
Blu-ray Emperor
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Thanks given by: | HeavyHitter (08-16-2015), Sky_Captain (08-17-2015) |
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#14159 | |
Blu-ray Grand Duke
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Edit: Anyway, I more meant over-emphasis rather than useless, as GaragePoet wisely rephrased. The idea that you can't evaluate how bad the green tint is without a calibrated display is nonsense. Last edited by StingingVelvet; 08-16-2015 at 10:25 PM. |
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#14160 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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For ultimate accuracy to the source - which does exist as a set of industry-mandated standards to which these discs are mastered to, believe it or not - then pro-calibration is essential because things like gamma, greyscale and colour temperature cannot be set by eye, and even small variations in these across the 0-100% luminance range can create drastically different results from display to display, even between the exact same model of TV.
Does everyone need such accuracy? No, because their lives function perfectly well without it (say it ain't so! ![]() Still, as I recently said in another post, my personal values and that of the wider user base of this forum seem to be skewing further apart by the day. Maybe I should just retreat to the HTF and be done with it, or create my own nitpicker's forum along the lines of databass, complete with fancy graphs and shit! ![]() |
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Thanks given by: | Biggiesized (09-10-2015), HeavyHitter (08-16-2015) |
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