![]() Like its ColorMunki siblings, the Display is pitched at photographers and creative enthusiasts, rather than industry professionals, and includes accompanying software with a strong focus on ease of use, while still including essential customisation options.įeatures that set the ColorMunki Display apart from the more basic Smile include projector calibration, as well as ambient light detection to automatically adjust a colour profile to compensate for variations in the intensity of ambient lighting. The ColorMunki Display is designed for monitor, projector and mobile device colour calibration. Check out the sites and information from X-Rite and Datacolor then buy whichever one you think you will like best.The ColorMunki Display sits in the middle of X-Rite’s trio of ColorMunki colorimeters, providing more control and versatility than the entry-level ColorMunki Smile, but without the printer profiling capabilities of the ColorMunki Photo. ![]() Both devices are widely used and give good color calibration results. I take Amazon and eBay customer reviews with a pound of salt. Either device can be set up to monitor room brightness and automatically compensate by adjusting the screen brightness appropriately. The final color calibrations results from either the ColorMonki Display or the Spyder4Pro or Spyder4Elite are similar but the calibration will be more stable if you set the monitor controls manually. The software for both devices then takes over and finishes the color calibrations. The Datacolor Advanced mode software provides you with graphical "meter" type screens to help you manually set the monitor controls to the correct levels for contrast, brightness and individual RGB values. In the automatic modes the software for both devices only gives you numeric values for setting the monitor brightness (and contrast?), which would only be approximate values and vary from monitor to monitor. If you let the Spyder4 do a fully automatic color calibration then there isn't any real difference in how easy it is to use either the ColorMonki Display or the Spyder4 units. It isn't any harder to do the Advanced color calibration mode with the Spyder4 but it does take more time. On the Spyder4 Pro, while there are some strong supporting customer reviews at Amazon, there are a few of strong detractors too, do you think those are extreme cases or some other issue? Is the Colorminki Display much more difficult to use for a relative newbie to this sort of thing (but I learn fast and figure things out) than the Spyder4 Pro? Yes, I will stay away from those two cheapest. I have seen you give much detailed and reasoned explanations helping with processing, thanks for taking the time to advise me. With the Datacolor system you need two devices, one for the monitor and one for the printer. If you want to color calibrate both your monitor and printer then the ColorMonki Photo has the advantage in that it is a single device that will calibrate both. Doing this will give you the most accurate and longest lasting color calibration. One advantage of the Spyder4 devices is that the software uses graphs to guide you through manually setting the monitor contrast, brightness, and individual RGB levels. My recommendations are the ColorMonki Display and the Sypder4Pro or Spyder4Elite. They are like a simple point and shoot camera - you point, you shoot, and you have to take what ever the camera decides to give you. I don't recommend either the X-Rite ColorMonki Smile or the Datacolor Spyder4Express because the software for them is too limited. Usually I try to assess even with negatives considered, but when I see a number of negatives, usually there is something to watch, from my limited buying experience.īut many seem to support your view of Colormunki i.e. The cheapest is not always the best and that version is still fairly reasonably priced, about 150 dollars.Īlso, the reviews on Amazon seem very positive, few negatives whereas I saw a few very negative for another competing product. Thanks, sounds like a good working package, so I guess that is what I will aim for. ![]() I bought it because I use two different monitors in a room with changing light - thus I wanted the real time ambient light measurement. I have been using the Display for some time now. What I want is good monitor calibration and some room to calibrate other things like printing etc if I need to later. ![]() Is the extra 90 dollars worth it for the Display? Is very well priced too and seems very well rated. The Smile is half the price, for about $89. It seems that the ColorMunki is popular and I see two reasonably priced models (I am not a pro, so don't see the need to spend too much, if I get high quality results from the tool anyway) the Smile and the 'Display'.
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