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So on a calibrated monitor, the difference between sRGB and Adobe RGB shouldn’t be so big.
No, the other way around: Only a profiled monitor will be able to show (in color managed applications) the difference between fully saturated sRGB and AdobeRGB green (with the prerequisite that the monitor gamut is large enough, as mentioned above).
Really appreciate your time!
OK. I am totally clueless. Perhaps something is wrong in my setup:
2x Dell U2410 screens. One is attached with DVI, other with HDMI.
Calibrated with X-rite i1 Display Pro in “Adobe RGB” preset mode. Luminance = 120 cd/m2 Whitepoint = 5000K
Tried calibrating with DisplayCAL and i1 Profiler.
Windows colour management is set as attached picture.
(it’s in danish, but everything is set as default – i read somewhere it is important to tick “Use windows calibration” – also the profile should be set to sRGB)
So – my monitor should be able to show aobut 95% of Adobe RGB. So the big question is why the heck it shows Adobe RGB and sRGB with no difference in colour-managed applications..
Any suggestions would be highly appreciated 🙂
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A little update.
This is getting more and more strange.
I have now removed all color-calibration software, all ICC profiles for the monitors (both on user and system level) and factory reset both monitors.
Now it seems as if my left monitor can’t even render Adobe RGB anymore. Both monitors are set on “Adobe RGB” preset.
To reset the LUT, I have to do a new calibration, right?
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Windows Photo Viewer does not have multi-monitor support.
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