Most displays run cooler daylight temperatures 6300-6500 so if you're doing color critical work, also be sure not to have any mix light sources in your space as your eyes would try to adjust somewhere between them and would alter your perception of the grade. Dimmed high quality daylight balanced lights behind the monitor against a neutral grey wall is your best bet :) Also beware of quicktime for screening.. VLC tends to have less shifts! a couple of my 2cents!
Damn, I never actually thought about how editing on different devices can affect the overall video outcome. Guess I’ll be sticking to my monitor. Solid video 8 👌🏾
‘The definition of genius is taking the complex and making it simple.’ Albert Einstein You are the first person to explain this to me that makes immediate sense, thanks.
Man, you explained it to simply and quickly, it took me a few weeks to learn it, but this video says all in 5 minutes haha, these topics are very important, personally because I enjoy watching movies with the best color accuracy, I only have one doubt, what is better to watch movies/cinema? 4K TV, a monitor or a projector? In what order would you put them from the best to the worst display? I hope you can answer me, thanks in advance !!
I'm trying to wrap my head around colour spaces and found this video. Great explanation that's short and sweet my man. Also, seeing the scene at 3:56 makes me miss Perth, damn! (I'm from Perth, but moved interstate last year)
Yooo thanks for this! Been going crazy with the differences. My clients just don't get it sometimes that when in a color session with me, it'll look a little different on their phones and tv. Well done vid!
You're very welcome, I generally have the same issue as well when I record footage in S-LOG2, my clients are always really confused as to why the video looks so bad on the camera.
I have a picture that looks normal on my wide color gamut device but after i try to move in to non wide color gamut device the skintone become a bit greeny.
I’d heard the phrase so many times, today is the first time I’m actually researching to understand what it is and I don’t think I have to watch anything else, tbh... Nicely done.
To be honest I doubt you will be able to get anything accurate. At 67% sRGB the display is already physically incapable of producing accurate colours, calibrating will make things better, but remember that the display has physical limitations.
Thanks for the explanation. One question that has been troubling me for some time though: in the colour space diagram that illustrates the colour space I can see on an sRGB monitor - if I am looking at that diagram on an sRGB monitor, how come I can see the colours outside of the sRGB triangle?
It's just a graphical representation, if you viewed the same graph on a sRGB screen and a P3 display, they'll actually look a little different due to the additional colors available on the wider color gamut display.
So if I wanna edit photos... I do I need LCD which is true to life color but not that pleasing to the eye or Oled which looks great but not accurate color? Ill be looking for sRGB 100% since like you said, most people use that instead of a better DCI p3 95%
Always best to go for accuracy when creating content because the image will vary in terms of appearance on different displays with lower color accuracy.
I just recently purchased a laptop and I think it has around 65% srgb. I am going to use it for some Lightroom editing but nothing professional. I don’t have a lot of money to spend. Most of my photos will be on Instagram. Do u think 65% srgb is enough for a beginner like me?
To be honest with you, 65% might be a bit low to get those really accurate edits in. However, to start out, anything you have is a good place to begin, but, in the future you will definitely need to upgrade.
It's just a visualization so that you can understand. If they displayed the true gamut, you would only see the closest available color from within the triangle of colors your monitor allows.
Amazing video! Although I would've appreciated if you had mentioned NTSC too. 3:50 so the monitor has 72% Adobe SRGB? Which equals 100% SRGB...the same goes for NTSC so are they the same?
*72% AdobeRGB is about 100% SRGB. I did not say 72% Adobe SRGB. Sorry about the NTSC buddy, we generally don't deal with that standard in this part of the world however in the future I will try to consider as many different standards as possible.
@@Channel8eight Alright thank you for taking it into consideration! Sorry for the typo, I'm just starting to get into the whole topic since I want to buy a screen tablet and most of them have either NTSC or sRGB so I'm most familiar with reading those.
67% sRGB is a bit low for today's standards. You will be able to watch Netflix however, you will not be getting the full range of colour depth and dynamic range possible.
@@Channel8eight but will that matter so much for a college going student? Like I'm not even a content creator or a professional editor. I just wanna play a few games do some college work and watch movies on it
Most displays run cooler daylight temperatures 6300-6500 so if you're doing color critical work, also be sure not to have any mix light sources in your space as your eyes would try to adjust somewhere between them and would alter your perception of the grade. Dimmed high quality daylight balanced lights behind the monitor against a neutral grey wall is your best bet :) Also beware of quicktime for screening.. VLC tends to have less shifts! a couple of my 2cents!
Thank you for that, I have pinned your comment. Hopefully it will be very insightful for viewers that see this video!
And also disable TruTone in Macs :)
I watched 3 other videos about this. And you definitely explained it the best
Damn, I never actually thought about how editing on different devices can affect the overall video outcome. Guess I’ll be sticking to my monitor. Solid video 8 👌🏾
Thanks Beeray, appreciate it fam!
‘The definition of genius is taking the complex and making it simple.’
Albert Einstein
You are the first person to explain this to me that makes immediate sense, thanks.
Why does this have only 637 upvotes?! One of the best explanations on the web!!!
72% color gamut is the standard, also fairly decent, with a 3k:1 CR VA display you're set. Thanks for the explanation, very well put.
Wow amazing video and thanks for helping. 😊
Man, you explained it to simply and quickly, it took me a few weeks to learn it, but this video says all in 5 minutes haha, these topics are very important, personally because I enjoy watching movies with the best color accuracy, I only have one doubt, what is better to watch movies/cinema? 4K TV, a monitor or a projector? In what order would you put them from the best to the worst display? I hope you can answer me, thanks in advance !!
Wow great video, really dumbed it down so that I could understand it! Appreciate you man, thanks!
This video provided me with such a clear and simple explanation. Thank you!
Thank you it is clear! What can you say about rec 709, how different id it from sRGB? THANKS!
I'm trying to wrap my head around colour spaces and found this video. Great explanation that's short and sweet my man.
Also, seeing the scene at 3:56 makes me miss Perth, damn! (I'm from Perth, but moved interstate last year)
Yooo thanks for this! Been going crazy with the differences. My clients just don't get it sometimes that when in a color session with me, it'll look a little different on their phones and tv. Well done vid!
You're very welcome, I generally have the same issue as well when I record footage in S-LOG2, my clients are always really confused as to why the video looks so bad on the camera.
Best explanation I've found so far
I have a picture that looks normal on my wide color gamut device but after i try to move in to non wide color gamut device the skintone become a bit greeny.
Great presentation.
It's Ironic that a video on color gamut isnt color corrected lol
Super insightful, though. You explained it well. Subscribed!
It is...
thx man , very useful topic but i think u should decrease the volume of the background music in ur final mix
Noted brother!
I’d heard the phrase so many times, today is the first time I’m actually researching to understand what it is and I don’t think I have to watch anything else, tbh... Nicely done.
solved my issue and dumbness in 5 mins. awesome vid!
Great informative video!
really very informative video
I have been searching for this for a long time, damn UA-cam
UA-cam algorithm be hiding my videos in the trenches 😪
@@Channel8eight no it's the related videos overshadowing what we are searching for.
Thank you, Channel 8. This is fascinating.
You're very welcome Jacob, stay tuned for more videos weekly!
what a great explanation! thank you! subbed!
Thank you for the explanation!
Is there an ultimate color space capable of getting more from every color?
thank you for a great, informative video!!!
Can i calibrate a 67% sRGB laptop display to get accurate colours
To be honest I doubt you will be able to get anything accurate. At 67% sRGB the display is already physically incapable of producing accurate colours, calibrating will make things better, but remember that the display has physical limitations.
@@Channel8eight thank you bro
well explained, thank you!
Thanks for the explanation. One question that has been troubling me for some time though: in the colour space diagram that illustrates the colour space I can see on an sRGB monitor - if I am looking at that diagram on an sRGB monitor, how come I can see the colours outside of the sRGB triangle?
It's just a graphical representation, if you viewed the same graph on a sRGB screen and a P3 display, they'll actually look a little different due to the additional colors available on the wider color gamut display.
So if I wanna edit photos... I do I need LCD which is true to life color but not that pleasing to the eye or Oled which looks great but not accurate color? Ill be looking for sRGB 100% since like you said, most people use that instead of a better DCI p3 95%
Always best to go for accuracy when creating content because the image will vary in terms of appearance on different displays with lower color accuracy.
I just recently purchased a laptop and I think it has around 65% srgb. I am going to use it for some Lightroom editing but nothing professional. I don’t have a lot of money to spend. Most of my photos will be on Instagram. Do u think 65% srgb is enough for a beginner like me?
To be honest with you, 65% might be a bit low to get those really accurate edits in. However, to start out, anything you have is a good place to begin, but, in the future you will definitely need to upgrade.
My monitor is a BenQ 2283. It says it has 72% NTSC(didn't see any mention of sRGB etc.)Was wondering what this meant?
72% NTSC is equivalent to 100% sRGB
But all those colors in the whole gamut (1:47) are showing in my cheap pc monitor. Please enlighten me.
It's just a visualization so that you can understand. If they displayed the true gamut, you would only see the closest available color from within the triangle of colors your monitor allows.
@@leah36gmailcom Got it. Thanks!
Amazing video! Although I would've appreciated if you had mentioned NTSC too.
3:50 so the monitor has 72% Adobe SRGB? Which equals 100% SRGB...the same goes for NTSC so are they the same?
*72% AdobeRGB is about 100% SRGB. I did not say 72% Adobe SRGB.
Sorry about the NTSC buddy, we generally don't deal with that standard in this part of the world however in the future I will try to consider as many different standards as possible.
@@Channel8eight Alright thank you for taking it into consideration!
Sorry for the typo, I'm just starting to get into the whole topic since I want to buy a screen tablet and most of them have either NTSC or sRGB so I'm most familiar with reading those.
Good stuff. Thank you.
Clear cut info
My phone can use rgb and p3
Oled doesn't have saturation turned up inherently...
Yes, however, due to the high contrast ratios the colors tend to be a lot more punchy and rich.
My laptop has 45% NTSC and 67% sRGB. Will I be able to enjoy watching Netflix on it? Will the colors fade out?
67% sRGB is a bit low for today's standards. You will be able to watch Netflix however, you will not be getting the full range of colour depth and dynamic range possible.
@@Channel8eight but will that matter so much for a college going student? Like I'm not even a content creator or a professional editor. I just wanna play a few games do some college work and watch movies on it
what about ntsc
Nice voice i have to admit that
Colors look better and more accurate on my iPhone 7 than on my tv 😐
For real I noticed that too on my iPad Pro though.
Use a calibration device like the Spider to calibrate your screen & problem solved.
Compression removes color from video's.
Why can't we just use everything the human eye can see..?
Stay more relaxed and smile. Why are u so grumpy 😂
I get the a lot, I'm like the happiest guy ever 😫
RWANDA