Morning everyone! Just a quick question...
I usually edit in a darkened or semi darkened room but this morning I noticed in Lightroom that as I opened the blind my image got a little lighter, almost like it automatically exposed for my lighting condition.
Now, if my Mac is doing this ,what type of light would you suggest is more suitable for editing? Do you work in a darkened room or daylight ? Which way is your Mac or PC facing from your light source?
Cathy
yeah.. your Mac will be doing this, especially if it's a Mac Book.
I'm sure you can turn that off... I think... While I use Macs at work, I do so under duress and have no idea how to do this. I just know the Macs at work do not do this, so it must be possible. I have a feeling it's a laptop thing though... probably to save power by dimming in darker conditions. A well calibrated screen should be a constant though, and you should manage the room lighting instead.
I use daylight balanced lighting (6500K) and calibrate my monitor to 6500K (D65). During the day, at home I don't edit as I have no effective blackout, and at work the darkroom has no daylight coming in for this reason, as most professional digital editing suites will.. Your colour acuity is seriously affected by the brightness and colour of ambient light.
To give an example, during sunset here at home (this room faces north east) my monitor actually looks cyan/green. I KNOW it's right, but compared to the excessively warm/orange light entering the windows, the neutrally calibrated monitor seems cold. On excessively cloudy days it seems very warm. It hasn't actually changed at all... it's just my brain playing tricks on me. This is another reason professional monitors have hoods over them - to remove extraneous peripheral distractions. Ideally though, for accuracy, remove daylight, and use a known colour temperature light source.
The worst offenders are normal domestic house lighting, which is around 3200 K. It makes a well calibrated monitor seem very cold indeed, and as a result, you tend to over compensate by making your images warmer than they actually are.
My advice is use teh computer in a room where you won't distract anyone else, buy a little desk lamp, and put one of these in it....
http://www.bltdirect.com/prolite-en...ve?adcid=pla&gclid=CJ22pbq50b8CFXDLtAod6jMABQ
Avoid other cheap daylight lamps, some are shockingly bad... I can vouch for Pro Lite though. I use them myself, and have measured their spectral response and it's equally as good as the Normlicht tubes found in professional viewing booths. Bounce an 11Watt Pro Lite off a WHITE wall or ceiling and the light levels shoudl be around near perfect for a monitor calibrated at 100cd/M2.
Even if you DON'T calibrate your screen.... having good ambient lighting will FORCE your brain to make reasonably accurate judgements when editing... unless you have terrible colour acuity.
Room lighting is really important for image editing.