Mfw I originally thought this would be a quick video but then remembered color management is a nightmare in complexity and had to explain a bunch of stuff for context 📝UPDATES SINCE THIS VIDEO WAS PUBLISHED: • It seems that the newer 'Photos' app in Windows is indeed color managed now
Another quick note on this; Some applications will occasionally cause windows to disassociate the chosen icc profiles you've just applied, and kick the output back to system defaults (overriding the colour management settings in windows). This mostly occurs in gaming apps and some full screen applications. If this happens to you, one recommendation is to use a free program called Colour Profile Keeper. Once installed, simply follow these steps: - Select the correct profile for the relevant screens and hit apply; - Select lock profiles, to stop programs over-riding it; & - Enable launch at startup & minimise to tray. This has been the most successful solution for me so far, although some apps will occasionally continue to reset your icc profiles. Lastly, make sure your monitor's hardware colour profiles are correctly selected in the OSD.
You know what else I love about the old photo viewer?! You could right click on the photo and select an option to take you to that file so that you can easily locate it in a sea of photos when trying to separate them into another directory or something
Dude... I've been nonstop around PCs and technology for about 15 years now and this is the first time I've heard someone talking about this. Awesome video my man.
Thank you so much. I've always had issues with my monitor regarding colour banding and I couldn't figure out how to fix it. But when I tried this video it was immediately fixed and my monitor looks so much better. I can't thank you enough!
It's super saturated for me :( My display makes the color more muted so when I view my art on other devices it looks like I just said 'hell yeah saturation'
If you just want the image to look maximum saturated on any monitor (at the cost of being not fully accurate of what you saw), you can just ensure that it is NOT being saved with a tagged/embedded color profile. So perhaps check if maybe your image editor by default is embedding sRGB which could be the cause.
OMG Windows 11 color profiles were not working at all, despite using a calibrator, and it was driving me crazy, until I went into that setting and checked "use Windows display calibration". Thank you! I could not use my I could not use my $5000 Sony OLED monitor to do any work for weeks until I found this video!
You are correct, Advanced Color is for HDR, but you _would_ want that if your monitor supports HDR; otherwise, you won't have an ICC profile when in HDR mode. Pretty sure you need a separate calibration under HDR to have the correct ICC profile for it, but I'm not sure. The difference between SDR and HDR modes is luminance. I think WCG (wide color gamut) is what your ICC profile manages in general, and it's good to calibrate in both conditions.
I appreciate that he speaks at the speed he does clearly and comprehensively. Other UA-camrs I have to speed 'em up to 1.25 or 1.5. He sounds like most people's 1.25x speeds :)
RIP to all the modern pc case owners XD..... reason why I bought an external CD drive.... yea I hardly use it and all but still sometimes like to use CD's and since I would rather own a bunch of CD's than thumbdrives because I'm a PC person .
In my experience, these manufacturer-supplied color profiles don't work all that well because of manufacturing differences in individual monitors of the same model of monitor. For example, just one of my Asus VS229 monitors had a significant greenish cast. Thus there is no substitute for a monitor calibration device.
Learned about it half a year ago when I began to use a second monitor. It´s so easy and so quick to do, but just because it already works when we plug it in everyone tends to ignore it.
If you were using sRGB you weren't doing it wrong because the point of color management is to ensure that printed output matches on-screen display as much as possible. You wouldn't be embedding your monitor-specific ICC profile to images you intend to share because on all screens other than yours the colors would be way off. If you pay close attention to the "color management" right around 16:05 settings you will see that windows defaults to sRGB for all instances where there is no embedded profile (and the program supports color management) or where the program doesn't support color management. The other thing that this long video doesn't mention is ensuring that your monitor is connected by DisplayPort (at least) and that your video card supports 10-bit per channel color. Not all video cards will support 10bpc color, most only do 8bpc. This setting is changed in your driver settings for your particular video card/GPU. Without 10bpc enabled your monitor won't be allowed to display more colors even if it supports them.
I proudly carried those CRT monitors while walking up steps when I was a bit younger and smaller :) You did a good job explaining many important details here Joe. I think the big companies who are pushing people to create more videos, and to add sharp images/videos from content sites to them, will put another level of complexity to the color space for many companies overall as well.
Now that you've explained color profiles, how about how to sync these profiles to your printer so that your printer is printing what you are seeing on your monitor. That's the most overlooked feature of having a PC and printer.
Joe your channel is why UA-cam was made. Knowledge and good contents I would have to pay some money for, so thank you for quaility Knowledge. Hope you win top youtube awards.
@LJB018 that's true, but you can always modify what you subscribe for, that way you would be surprised by what pops on your recommendation. Thanks to @youtube, this is where I learnt how to be a - Graphics Designer - Video editor - Front End dev - WordPress dev - UI , UX , Figma designer - Wikipedia dev Enjoy music and football latest news. Thanks to them
I just got a new expensive drawing tablet and I was so bummed out with the colors. I couldn't fix them AT ALL because I couldn't find a detailed guide like this on how to install profiles. THANK YOU!
Even though I may be using my monitor "wrong", I personally hate how certain colors look with the provided color profile (for example, it makes blues look like purple) so I'm sticking with sRGB anyways. Although that's only with the current Samsung CRG5 I'm using so other monitors may look better with their provided color profiles.
This video is kind of misleading, if your monitor has a gamut of 99% sRGB (I have a LG 29WK600) and nothing else, the profile you should use is in fact sRGB or the one provided by your monitor. Color profiles are unique, to have yours, you need to have some advanced tools to calibrate your monitor and get a profile unique to your monitor, there's no such a thing to download someone's else profile. Another thing to pay special attention, whatever you do in whatever software you have to edit a photo, you *ALWAYS* export in sRGB. The exact same applies if you monitor can handle different color profiles, always export in sRGB.
@@TheAsianKidxD No, I had it playing in the background while I was busy with something and when I took a 10 second break just to gather my thoughts I heard that bit and I was like "Wait a sec...Rewind that..." so no, it all happened by a sheer coincidence. The universe just works like that - it'd be foolish to deny that there are materias and forces that are above us and beyond our current understanding, lol
Good overview of color management profiles, but there are two more layers to this. Some monitors have alternative display modes that you'll want to make sure are off while you're setting things up, or when you need color accuracy. Like, my work monitor has a "low blue-light" mode. More importantly, the display profile is, as you say, for the model, not for your individual monitor. So if you can see the differences , you should also use the monitor calibration built into Windows 10, /after/ you've installed the correct ICC, to fine-tune your picture. It's only as good as your eyes are, but since you can only look at your display with your eyes, it should still be an improvement. With my work computer, before calibration one monitor had a distinctly rose cast and the other a distinctly greenish cast, and both of them lost low-contrast details (like the button shading on the Ribbon in MSOffice, or which item you have selected on a drop down menu) unless you turned the monitors up to blinding. (Yes, the monitor's contrast was maxed out.) Now that I've calibrated them, I can keep that at a much more sensible 30% brightness, have consistent color, and can actually see everything.
Usually monitors should be set to 80% contrast, since above that might lose some accuracy and detail and might have a slightly different colour tint. It also gives some space for Overdrive to work correctly.
And about Windows colour management. If the colour profile has colour correction, I find it much more reliable if you install DisplayCAL to use it's LUT loader which would auto reload the correction if it drops for some reason, even if you don't use it to generate the profile (and it's really often the correction would be dropped by Windows, weirdly). Though if you do have a colorimeter, even if you do use DisplayCAL to generate profile rather than the official tool, you should still install the official tool to get the reference file which it is said to allow better accuracy.
Absolutely awesome video. I never installed any monitor software and I just did after watching your segment, my current Alienware 3420DW has a very colour gamut 138% sRGB mode, in addition to a high DCP3 colour gamut….after installing the software I noticed my web browsing has become slightly more vibrant and some colours pop more…..doing my home photo’s with Adobe software…..is day and night difference. What I see and print is more accurate and less oversaturated in areas. Great video ThioJoe 🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥳🎉👍
before I watch this video, just wanted to let you know that my monitor is upside down, with inverted colors, flashing ridiculously fast and the power isn't plugged in. When I tried to call the manufacture, they said to insert the floppy disk for the serial number and I just cant boot into my pc because my windows is expired and its asking to verify my credit card with PayPal to continue so i'm stuck help
it should be more apparent that you should use them. Windows on default uses some generic settings/drivers, probably so you can actually install the proper profile (you need to see what is happening on the computer, to install drivers) so most people who dont install monitor drivers, just see these standard generic windows drivers, that are there just so your monitor can work at all
Thank you! I am using a 38GN950 from LG and I think this made a big difference! Before the ICC file the extreme saturation of reds on blue for instance, would even make it difficult to see where the red stopped and the blue began (the border would kind of swim around) and that's gone now.
@Prit Kumar Of course I will have it in it. I can't just use windows all the time. I like to switch between Windows and Linux, now that I made a bootable usb drive.
I just spent 12 hours messing with front porches and back porches and pixel clocks to get my old tv right... None of d info was easy to find when i am trying but then this video pops up after I've given up... Ty
When I got my first CRT VGA monitor many years ago, it came with a special calibration program and a vinyl rectangle that you were supposed to stick on the screen. The program would then display different images and you were supposed to click on the square that most closely matched the vinyl piece. After you were done, your monitor was supposedly perfectly calibrated. The only problem was that the image was way too dark. Dark areas of photos appeared black, I couldn't see what I was doing in dimly lit areas of games, I couldn't tell most color gradients apart, etc. The last monitor that I actually bought, which was also a CRT, didn't come with any disk. Since then, I've gotten my monitors free from the trash. Right now, I'm using a 19" Dell 4:3 LCD display. I have larger ones, 16:9 ones, but this is what I'm used to. In any case, I have an OLD computer which didn't come with color management software built into Windows and Microsoft has long since scrubbed any trace of it from their site in their quest to pretend that old versions of Windows never existed.
Love the content. Where other tech tubers struggle with fresh content, you seem to find a way to give useful relevant information so thank you for that. We get better watching your videos, so keep it up!
Wow been using my monitor for a long time not knowing this! Just installed the ICC profile and the colors look way better, especially in this UA-cam video! Thanks, man!!!
This is really well researched, great job! One thing you missed, is some monitors have different colorspaces in the OSD menu and that needs to align with your icc profile.
Been using a Acer XB241H for five years now. Just hated the colors (washes out and super bright). Thought I was lied to at the store and out of pride, refuse to buy another monitor…. Found a 3rd party icc, installed it as instructed here and it looks 1,000X better! It isn’t OLED or 4k, but it doesn’t hurt my eyes and I can see details that I haven’t seen before! Thanks
I've noticed so many issues with the new Windows Photo app ever since Win10 came out. A lot has been fixed, but I'm confused why the color issue still hasn't been fixed...after all these years!!
It instantly made the colors feel much nicer to the eyes, like turning on night mode, but on day mode, while I can still see everything very clearly :)
Chrome actually treats untagged content as sRGB by default, so everything will be color managed without having to change any extra settings. Firefox doesn't do this, but you can change a setting in about:config to get the same behavior.
Chrome still shows me oversaturated colours though. Having the icm installed or not does not make a single difference. I now use novideo srgb clamp which works fine. It can also use the manufacture icm file to base the clamp on instead of edid values and if I do that it sticks to P3 on srgb mode :\
Curious thing is that, now that I built my first PC, I got into icc profiles a week or two before this video, and now ThioJoe drops this video. Pretty curious, huh? It's nice that more people know about icc profiles and get a chance to have a better color experience. Thanks!
Wow this is deep! It answered a question I have had though. I had no idea how to install the Adobe color profile. Thank you for showing how to do this.
I just did it - got it from display lag and now used their setup guide for my monitor plus the ICC profile thanks - Subbed... I will expect less headaches based on how much dimmer it is - :)
*I really love thiojoe videos it will be very informative and interesting to watch till the end after clicking it and I learn something new by watching Joe's videos!!!!!* ❤️🤩
When I overclocked my screen in the Nvidia Control Panel, the colors of my screen automatically seemed "stronger" than before and I actually prefer that.
This is one of those areas of computing that is shrouded in so much mystery because it is deeply technical and has never really been translated to normal users. Thanks for clearing some of the fog. Luckily the Mac color dialog is waaaaay more straight-forward. :-) Also: Why is this data not embedded somewhere that EDID can get to it? What's a 1MB ROM chip cost now??
I can't even remember the last time a monitor I bought came with a disk. My last 3 or 4 had nothing with it. Not only that, I don't have a disk drive anymore either.
Thiojoe very nice to finally have the correct information! For years now just couldn't get anywhere with this topic. So yes, people have been wrong for a long time about monitors.
dude.... dude... OMG YES! I've been looking for someone to explain this to me for the longest OMG ... in the process of buying a monitor and this has helped. Thank you So much.
@@Necdasar It was a no-name/none-branded monitor, originally purchased for testing of old VGA DOS machines. I got it used from a computer store that went out of business. It didn't come with drivers and didn't need them for DOS. No FCC info, or anything. The OSD chip must be defective as I've never been able to access a menu. For my purposes though, it works, I put a comment in about how fun it can be when the manufacturer and model number is unknown. It used to be that monitors would identify themselves in Windows. It would be nice if they did that again.
When I installed the profile for my secondary monitor, the colors shifted. But I was happy since the white are now white. So thank you random redditor that I gave all my faith in
@@1ndictus445 i doubt you have the exact same monitor as this person if you watched the video, you would know that these icc profiles are made especially for specific monitors, so if you dont have the **exact** same model of a monitor, it will maybe even look worse
Bro. You are a hero. I don't know why UA-cam recommend me this video but it it just randomly help me so much.God damn, I can notice the different after installing the profile and driver for my AOC C24G1 monitor. Thank you so much bro
This is super cool and helped me validate the work I've already done with a calibration guide I wrote for the Samsung Neo G7 43" flat. I created an SDR and HDR ICC profile for 120cd/m2 with the X-Rite i1Display (Pro) Plus, which is now known as a Calibrite ColorChecker Display Plus. Couple things that may have already been covered by others. 1) I can confirm, from the testing I have done, Advanced is for an HDR calibrated ICC profile. 2) The option you suggested to enable Use Windows Display Calibration is, from what I have tested, related to the Microsoft calibration tool and creates an ICC profile when ised. So I suggest to disable, but it's moot unless you use that tool itself I believe. I would welcome your experienced eye on the guide I wrote and will refrain from posting the address unless you ask for it.
i really recommend even to go further then shown in this movie: if youre a pc enthusiast and care for a decent quality if your monitor i would suggest to invest into a monitor calibration tool to make your own monitor profiles. the difference in qualits is quite noticeable, even with new monitors direct from the shelf. i use my old spyder 5 elite from datacolor for over 10 yrs now and i've never regreted the investment of roundabout 300€ back then. the software from the tool does several color and brightness measurements of your monitor and compared them with the standard colors. then generates a color profile for the monitor that will be loaded everytime you start your computer. its a very noticeable difference, especially on older monitors. i renew the calibration every year, to keep it recent.
True I have a Spyder 4 pro and use it on a desktop and 2 laptops. The best thing about it is when you make a colour print the colours you get exactly match the colours on the monitor.
Irfanview is pretty nice for pictures. It also has color management. But the problem is it will embed those profiles onto the photo if you enable it. I still use it though.
Holy shit! Made such a big difference as soon as I applied! I tested a document that I only saw that there were different colors when I pasted something from this monitor to the another one! I just opened that document and it is now very obvious the color difference! Thank you!(Samsung SyncMaster 710N)
@@lolerie Thank you, I don't need super accurate colors, just being able to see better was more than good enough!(it was very hard to see selected text from not selected text in pgadmin before that). tks
When I change those color profiles, I immediately notice an issue. That's because the default profile in Windows was way off from the calibrated version I created myself. It's not just certain apps, it's the entire desktop experience.
I've been using the Windows 7 photo app for so long I forgot that I switched it. I can't believe they would ever release the new one, especially learning this.
Hesitant to take advice but risked it and it worked! I've been Hesitant to take advice from Thio ever since the time I was laughing at myself the whole time I was un-taping batteries from my cat 5 cable. Thanks man
Thanks ThioJoe! Your intro is a perfect TL;DR, very clear and concise, with chapter marks on the different topics and everything. In just a minute I had a laugh and I learned why the specific ICC file for my monitor is very useful and why I can live without it but I definitely would rather have it. I don't think my cheap monitor has full sRGB gamut, hah, but this is great info, thanks a lot!
Glad you explained this. I am by no means a noob, but this windows color management software must be some of the most ridiculously convoluted crap I ever tried to use. These windows devs really do not understand windows users. Your video was a great help! Many thanks!
Agree on howtogeek articles, always well written and properly edited. Also, defaulting the new uncorrected viewer likely has to do with the trend to supersaturate video outputs by popular demand. It was the same in cathode ray days. You would walk in at a restaurant and the expensive Sony Wega was set to dayglow colors. Give the people what they want, I guess.
many thanks for information, hobby photography here :-). One thing i have noticed, that windows 10 new default photoviewer actually uses monitors .icc profiles. I downloaded custom user icc profile for my VP2768, did everything like in video. Now, when i open one of my own pictures as .jpg files, and switch between official icc profile and a custom one, i see slight difference in colors. The magentas are more clear now.
Mfw I originally thought this would be a quick video but then remembered color management is a nightmare in complexity and had to explain a bunch of stuff for context
📝UPDATES SINCE THIS VIDEO WAS PUBLISHED:
• It seems that the newer 'Photos' app in Windows is indeed color managed now
oh lol
Lolllololololol
Yeah. We are a bunch of dumb people
Only ThioJoe knows how to use things correctly. ☻
lg support sucks. can i have a link for the software?
I figured it out
I was first like and reply noiceee
Another quick note on this; Some applications will occasionally cause windows to disassociate the chosen icc profiles you've just applied, and kick the output back to system defaults (overriding the colour management settings in windows). This mostly occurs in gaming apps and some full screen applications. If this happens to you, one recommendation is to use a free program called Colour Profile Keeper. Once installed, simply follow these steps:
- Select the correct profile for the relevant screens and hit apply;
- Select lock profiles, to stop programs over-riding it; &
- Enable launch at startup & minimise to tray.
This has been the most successful solution for me so far, although some apps will occasionally continue to reset your icc profiles.
Lastly, make sure your monitor's hardware colour profiles are correctly selected in the OSD.
I used DisplayCAL over that
This only applies to gamma correction curves, color space transforms don't work in games in the first place.
Or I could just continue not caring
You know what else I love about the old photo viewer?! You could right click on the photo and select an option to take you to that file so that you can easily locate it in a sea of photos when trying to separate them into another directory or something
I love these videos they’re always something I didn’t really know, it’s never beating off to a dead horse
i dot think thats how you say it
lmao yeah quote is not that chief
@@TheKing29102 Did you win the lottery
Idk what you guys are talking about. Beating off to dead horses is the best ❤️
Get help
Dude... I've been nonstop around PCs and technology for about 15 years now and this is the first time I've heard someone talking about this. Awesome video my man.
Thank you so much. I've always had issues with my monitor regarding colour banding and I couldn't figure out how to fix it. But when I tried this video it was immediately fixed and my monitor looks so much better. I can't thank you enough!
Bruuuuh. The under-saturated look on another device after drawing something is so relatable. Thank you!
I have the same problem that's why I transfer a copy of the image to another device to see what i need to change.
What do you draw?
Same here when using Photoshop and doing graphic design
It's super saturated for me :( My display makes the color more muted so when I view my art on other devices it looks like I just said 'hell yeah saturation'
If you just want the image to look maximum saturated on any monitor (at the cost of being not fully accurate of what you saw), you can just ensure that it is NOT being saved with a tagged/embedded color profile. So perhaps check if maybe your image editor by default is embedding sRGB which could be the cause.
OMG Windows 11 color profiles were not working at all, despite using a calibrator, and it was driving me crazy, until I went into that setting and checked "use Windows display calibration". Thank you! I could not use my I could not use my $5000 Sony OLED monitor to do any work for weeks until I found this video!
Some newly released monitors don't have CD installers included anymore.
Yes unfortunately that is a pity. Because it is missing something important to install.
@@Jakef100f my monitor had to be calibrated with i1 display pro same goes with tv to further correct it.
@@xeonitas german detected.
@@ElectricityTasteryeah, what gave it away? My content or my spelling? if it was my spelling please tell me, i always want to improve my english
@@xeonitas "ist" overwhelming should be is. Originale nichtskönner!
You are correct, Advanced Color is for HDR, but you _would_ want that if your monitor supports HDR; otherwise, you won't have an ICC profile when in HDR mode. Pretty sure you need a separate calibration under HDR to have the correct ICC profile for it, but I'm not sure. The difference between SDR and HDR modes is luminance. I think WCG (wide color gamut) is what your ICC profile manages in general, and it's good to calibrate in both conditions.
especially if you have an LCD since HDR mode means increased backlight brightness, which shifts gamma
I appreciate that he speaks at the speed he does clearly and comprehensively. Other UA-camrs I have to speed 'em up to 1.25 or 1.5. He sounds like most people's 1.25x speeds :)
Watched on 1.5 and saw that comment :D
honestly i just watch at 2x speed and i cant go back to regular speed, its just so slow
@@heliqs_ same
Oh yea, lemme find the non-existent DVD that didn't came with my monitor :D (edit: found a new and better monitor)
Even better
Lemme use my laptop's DVD with my totally existent laptop dvd drive
wait
It probably did, we just bin that shite..
@@polytelus laptops dont have seperate monitors
RIP to all the modern pc case owners XD..... reason why I bought an external CD drive.... yea I hardly use it and all but still sometimes like to use CD's and since I would rather own a bunch of CD's than thumbdrives because I'm a PC person .
@@kidofhell been thinking of swapping my DVD to bluray for larger data storage. I lose thumb drives
This is easily the most concise and accurate description of color space and how to get it right on a monitor I have seen on UA-cam.
Finally hes back
Best how to's on the whole damn internet!
@@Adrien_broner facts
In my experience, these manufacturer-supplied color profiles don't work all that well because of manufacturing differences in individual monitors of the same model of monitor. For example, just one of my Asus VS229 monitors had a significant greenish cast. Thus there is no substitute for a monitor calibration device.
Learned about it half a year ago when I began to use a second monitor.
It´s so easy and so quick to do, but just because it already works when we plug it in everyone tends to ignore it.
If you were using sRGB you weren't doing it wrong because the point of color management is to ensure that printed output matches on-screen display as much as possible. You wouldn't be embedding your monitor-specific ICC profile to images you intend to share because on all screens other than yours the colors would be way off. If you pay close attention to the "color management" right around 16:05 settings you will see that windows defaults to sRGB for all instances where there is no embedded profile (and the program supports color management) or where the program doesn't support color management.
The other thing that this long video doesn't mention is ensuring that your monitor is connected by DisplayPort (at least) and that your video card supports 10-bit per channel color. Not all video cards will support 10bpc color, most only do 8bpc. This setting is changed in your driver settings for your particular video card/GPU. Without 10bpc enabled your monitor won't be allowed to display more colors even if it supports them.
Nicely done 😊
I proudly carried those CRT monitors while walking up steps when I was a bit younger and smaller :) You did a good job explaining many important details here Joe. I think the big companies who are pushing people to create more videos, and to add sharp images/videos from content sites to them, will put another level of complexity to the color space for many companies overall as well.
CRT monitor also fits perfectly in the car seat and can wear a seat belt! Facts!
Now that you've explained color profiles, how about how to sync these profiles to your printer so that your printer is printing what you are seeing on your monitor. That's the most overlooked feature of having a PC and printer.
Could you explain it? Can’t find a decent guide
People still use printers?
@@brownsterring9259 Aside from the obvious, people who understand not having physical copies of important information is a disaster waiting to happen.
@@brownsterring9259 Well, how the hell are u gonna print something out if u don't have a printer?!
Joe your channel is why UA-cam was made. Knowledge and good contents I would have to pay some money for, so thank you for quaility Knowledge.
Hope you win top youtube awards.
@LJB018 that's true, but you can always modify what you subscribe for, that way you would be surprised by what pops on your recommendation.
Thanks to @youtube, this is where I learnt how to be a
- Graphics Designer
- Video editor
- Front End dev
- WordPress dev
- UI , UX , Figma designer
- Wikipedia dev
Enjoy music and football latest news.
Thanks to them
He used to make funny fake tech content unironically and youtube told him to stop making satire content cause people actually do it
@@lemonadestandclips3349 - I doubt "UA-cam told him", cause there are worse examples on UA-cam that keep going and get monetized and all.
I just got a new expensive drawing tablet and I was so bummed out with the colors. I couldn't fix them AT ALL because I couldn't find a detailed guide like this on how to install profiles. THANK YOU!
Even though I may be using my monitor "wrong", I personally hate how certain colors look with the provided color profile (for example, it makes blues look like purple) so I'm sticking with sRGB anyways. Although that's only with the current Samsung CRG5 I'm using so other monitors may look better with their provided color profiles.
mine too
This video is kind of misleading, if your monitor has a gamut of 99% sRGB (I have a LG 29WK600) and nothing else, the profile you should use is in fact sRGB or the one provided by your monitor. Color profiles are unique, to have yours, you need to have some advanced tools to calibrate your monitor and get a profile unique to your monitor, there's no such a thing to download someone's else profile. Another thing to pay special attention, whatever you do in whatever software you have to edit a photo, you *ALWAYS* export in sRGB. The exact same applies if you monitor can handle different color profiles, always export in sRGB.
you mention this disc as if anyone has an optical drive these days
And yet they still ship the disc and he immediately mentions the files are online too so...
I do
@@Felttipfuzzywuzzyflyguy thanks for the recap genius
I do 😢
@@Felttipfuzzywuzzyflyguy my Lenovo came without a disc.
4:05 The exact moment when you can hear Theo SINGING
You pay so much attention you must be really good at concentration 😂
vibrato
@@TheAsianKidxD No, I had it playing in the background while I was busy with something and when I took a 10 second break just to gather my thoughts I heard that bit and I was like "Wait a sec...Rewind that..." so no, it all happened by a sheer coincidence. The universe just works like that - it'd be foolish to deny that there are materias and forces that are above us and beyond our current understanding, lol
@@Vla3d Thanks bro you made me laugh!! 🤣🤣
lol
Good overview of color management profiles, but there are two more layers to this.
Some monitors have alternative display modes that you'll want to make sure are off while you're setting things up, or when you need color accuracy. Like, my work monitor has a "low blue-light" mode.
More importantly, the display profile is, as you say, for the model, not for your individual monitor. So if you can see the differences , you should also use the monitor calibration built into Windows 10, /after/ you've installed the correct ICC, to fine-tune your picture. It's only as good as your eyes are, but since you can only look at your display with your eyes, it should still be an improvement.
With my work computer, before calibration one monitor had a distinctly rose cast and the other a distinctly greenish cast, and both of them lost low-contrast details (like the button shading on the Ribbon in MSOffice, or which item you have selected on a drop down menu) unless you turned the monitors up to blinding. (Yes, the monitor's contrast was maxed out.)
Now that I've calibrated them, I can keep that at a much more sensible 30% brightness, have consistent color, and can actually see everything.
Usually monitors should be set to 80% contrast, since above that might lose some accuracy and detail and might have a slightly different colour tint. It also gives some space for Overdrive to work correctly.
And about Windows colour management. If the colour profile has colour correction, I find it much more reliable if you install DisplayCAL to use it's LUT loader which would auto reload the correction if it drops for some reason, even if you don't use it to generate the profile (and it's really often the correction would be dropped by Windows, weirdly).
Though if you do have a colorimeter, even if you do use DisplayCAL to generate profile rather than the official tool, you should still install the official tool to get the reference file which it is said to allow better accuracy.
I noticed the change (for the better) as soon as I closed Color Management and returned to your video. Thank you.
Absolutely awesome video. I never installed any monitor software and I just did after watching your segment, my current Alienware 3420DW has a very colour gamut 138% sRGB mode, in addition to a high DCP3 colour gamut….after installing the software I noticed my web browsing has become slightly more vibrant and some colours pop more…..doing my home photo’s with Adobe software…..is day and night difference. What I see and print is more accurate and less oversaturated in areas. Great video ThioJoe 🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥳🎉👍
Actually it should pop less. Browsers most CSS stuff is sRGB only.
before I watch this video, just wanted to let you know that my monitor is upside down, with inverted colors, flashing ridiculously fast and the power isn't plugged in. When I tried to call the manufacture, they said to insert the floppy disk for the serial number and I just cant boot into my pc because my windows is expired and its asking to verify my credit card with PayPal to continue so i'm stuck help
Spray it with WD-40
Sounds like you need to shampoo it and wash its a little dirty, fixed it for me.
you're low on wiper fluid
@@creekboi7 blinker fluid*
Who the F still uses Floppy disk in 2021?
I genuinely thought the "drivers" that came with monitors was silly and useless. Booyyyy I was ignorant. This was enlightening. Thank you!
it should be more apparent that you should use them. Windows on default uses some generic settings/drivers, probably so you can actually install the proper profile (you need to see what is happening on the computer, to install drivers)
so most people who dont install monitor drivers, just see these standard generic windows drivers, that are there just so your monitor can work at all
Thank you! I am using a 38GN950 from LG and I think this made a big difference!
Before the ICC file the extreme saturation of reds on blue for instance, would even make it difficult to see where the red stopped and the blue began (the border would kind of swim around) and that's gone now.
Well this will come in handy when I'll be getting my own desktop computer, with multiple operating systems.
@Prit Kumar Of course I will have it in it. I can't just use windows all the time. I like to switch between Windows and Linux, now that I made a bootable usb drive.
I just spent 12 hours messing with front porches and back porches and pixel clocks to get my old tv right... None of d info was easy to find when i am trying but then this video pops up after I've given up... Ty
I like how this channel went from absolute troll to what it is today and actually providing some detailed information to general audience.
I was thinking that lmao this guy made a career chatting shit but in an entertaining way lol
?????? troll? Even Linus says Thio is brighter than him. I can't remember not learning from Thio.
@@noheader old theo (2007 i thnk) was a troll but now he is more like a tech tips ofc its because now days those kind of channels got nuked by ty lol
@@noheader He literally had troll videos saying bs where he reverses at the end with a gotchya
@@noheader The thing with Thio is he learns things that arent even true much of the time. Thats how much he knows.
When I got my first CRT VGA monitor many years ago, it came with a special calibration program and a vinyl rectangle that you were supposed to stick on the screen. The program would then display different images and you were supposed to click on the square that most closely matched the vinyl piece. After you were done, your monitor was supposedly perfectly calibrated. The only problem was that the image was way too dark. Dark areas of photos appeared black, I couldn't see what I was doing in dimly lit areas of games, I couldn't tell most color gradients apart, etc.
The last monitor that I actually bought, which was also a CRT, didn't come with any disk. Since then, I've gotten my monitors free from the trash. Right now, I'm using a 19" Dell 4:3 LCD display. I have larger ones, 16:9 ones, but this is what I'm used to. In any case, I have an OLD computer which didn't come with color management software built into Windows and Microsoft has long since scrubbed any trace of it from their site in their quest to pretend that old versions of Windows never existed.
Love the content. Where other tech tubers struggle with fresh content, you seem to find a way to give useful relevant information so thank you for that. We get better watching your videos, so keep it up!
Dude recycles ideas more than baby hippos recycle poop.
@@ablazedguy why are you here then?
Wow been using my monitor for a long time not knowing this! Just installed the ICC profile and the colors look way better, especially in this UA-cam video! Thanks, man!!!
Whenever I already know Joe's content I'm like:
"Sometimes my genius is... it's almost frightening."~Top Gear.
I thought my monitor was just crap with its colors, turned out it needed a color profile, thank you for sharing this information!
This is really well researched, great job! One thing you missed, is some monitors have different colorspaces in the OSD menu and that needs to align with your icc profile.
Ideally only the auto HW on display is there, like on LG C9 :) 3DLUT inside is calibratable.
Been using a Acer XB241H for five years now. Just hated the colors (washes out and super bright). Thought I was lied to at the store and out of pride, refuse to buy another monitor…. Found a 3rd party icc, installed it as instructed here and it looks 1,000X better! It isn’t OLED or 4k, but it doesn’t hurt my eyes and I can see details that I haven’t seen before! Thanks
Very useful video ThioJoe 😎😎😎
IT professional for over 10 years and i never touched this topic. Thank you.
I've noticed so many issues with the new Windows Photo app ever since Win10 came out. A lot has been fixed, but I'm confused why the color issue still hasn't been fixed...after all these years!!
It instantly made the colors feel much nicer to the eyes, like turning on night mode, but on day mode, while I can still see everything very clearly :)
Chrome actually treats untagged content as sRGB by default, so everything will be color managed without having to change any extra settings. Firefox doesn't do this, but you can change a setting in about:config to get the same behavior.
about://config*
@@russianyoutube It's about:config. And Chrome was unable to do this for years making Firefox (after the tweak) the only fully color-managed browser.
@@russianyoutube that gives me an invalid URL error, lol who told you that was correct? it's not lol
Chrome still shows me oversaturated colours though. Having the icm installed or not does not make a single difference.
I now use novideo srgb clamp which works fine. It can also use the manufacture icm file to base the clamp on instead of edid values and if I do that it sticks to P3 on srgb mode :\
Yes finally someone to explain this properly. I’ve been using the ICC profiles for my monitors for 20 years.
I downloaded the ICC file from the manufacturer and as soon as I applied it, the look of the monitor changed. But it was slight.
You should be using MacOS cause that does not happen on Windows.
Thank you. The color on my new monitor was driving me crazy. Thanks to this video, I have it looking really good.
Curious thing is that, now that I built my first PC, I got into icc profiles a week or two before this video, and now ThioJoe drops this video. Pretty curious, huh? It's nice that more people know about icc profiles and get a chance to have a better color experience. Thanks!
I hate how good your videos are! Not only production but also the information and topics! Damn you good! :D
Wow this is deep! It answered a question I have had though. I had no idea how to install the Adobe color profile. Thank you for showing how to do this.
I just did it - got it from display lag and now used their setup guide for my monitor plus the ICC profile thanks - Subbed... I will expect less headaches based on how much dimmer it is - :)
Thanks a lot for the info , I was setting my dual display today on my laptop and desktop
Shadow: a dark area or shape produced by a body coming between rays of light and a surface.
@@gulfELAl9155 WTF 😒??
@@windowsxpprofessional they’re posting definitions of random things if you look at their comment history
@@WoolEndy yeah 😂
*I really love thiojoe videos it will be very informative and interesting to watch till the end after clicking it and I learn something new by watching Joe's videos!!!!!* ❤️🤩
*I never thought you would heart my comment by making my day that I got a heart from one of my favourite youtuber. That means a lot Sir!!!!!!* ❤️
NOTE: As of Firefox 89, Firefox does NOT need to be configured as it reads from the operating system automatically.
When I overclocked my screen in the Nvidia Control Panel, the colors of my screen automatically seemed "stronger" than before and I actually prefer that.
Yep, I also got HDR10 and 700hz boost. It's not easy to find that in Nvidia Control Panel ofc.
@@privettoli because there is no HDR10 in Nvidia control panel.
Following your instruction I improved my old monitor look. Thanks!
This is one of those areas of computing that is shrouded in so much mystery because it is deeply technical and has never really been translated to normal users. Thanks for clearing some of the fog. Luckily the Mac color dialog is waaaaay more straight-forward. :-)
Also: Why is this data not embedded somewhere that EDID can get to it? What's a 1MB ROM chip cost now??
Showing the reset monitor to default settings on the monitor before applying ICM would benefit this video. Thank You.
Thank You for all of your videos that you did. I am enjoying all of them
I was wondering why everything was so saturated, thank you for the explanation.
You always amaze me man !!!
I can't even remember the last time a monitor I bought came with a disk. My last 3 or 4 had nothing with it. Not only that, I don't have a disk drive anymore either.
Hello Theo, love your videos, Cheers from Australia.. 🌏🙂
Thiojoe very nice to finally have the correct information! For years now just couldn't get anywhere with this topic. So yes, people have been wrong for a long time about monitors.
It's good to know just how many thing's I'm using wrong on my computer 😉
Do you play cr?
Yeah this will be useful, for when I'll be making my own desktop computer with Windows and Linux on it.
@@windowsxpprofessional u a Windows XP professionals? What's cr?
@@pyp2205 while the file wasn't shipped with my Asus MX279 monitors it was a download from the Asus site. Can confirm it makes a difference
@@windowsxpprofessional **activates the trap card Wannacry** 😜
dude.... dude... OMG YES! I've been looking for someone to explain this to me for the longest OMG ... in the process of buying a monitor and this has helped. Thank you So much.
I love it when the notification show's up "someone" liked your comment and you have a new subscriber""......🥺🥺
And I hate spammers like you
And I hate you
Sthu 😂
I didn't _ignore_ the disc. I just didn't have a disc drive since like 2012.
Fun is, when the manufacturer/model info is unknown.
This info can be usually found in the monitor's menu.
if i understand correctly, that's probably cause you didn't install monitor drivers.
@@Necdasar It was a no-name/none-branded monitor, originally purchased for testing of old VGA DOS machines. I got it used from a computer store that went out of business. It didn't come with drivers and didn't need them for DOS. No FCC info, or anything. The OSD chip must be defective as I've never been able to access a menu. For my purposes though, it works, I put a comment in about how fun it can be when the manufacturer and model number is unknown. It used to be that monitors would identify themselves in Windows. It would be nice if they did that again.
or go to device manager, find monitor, expand, go on plug and play, and go instal driver for monitor, and you are done...
When I installed the profile for my secondary monitor, the colors shifted. But I was happy since the white are now white. So thank you random redditor that I gave all my faith in
Can you give a link to the icc profile in question? I wanna try it out
@@1ndictus445 i doubt you have the exact same monitor as this person
if you watched the video, you would know that these icc profiles are made especially for specific monitors, so if you dont have the **exact** same model of a monitor, it will maybe even look worse
@@wojtekpolska1013 I see
Bro. You are a hero. I don't know why UA-cam recommend me this video but it it just randomly help me so much.God damn, I can notice the different after installing the profile and driver for my AOC C24G1 monitor. Thank you so much bro
even when I have no program running in the foreground, then also my laptop uses more than 50 % memory.I have 8GB RAM . Is it okay?
This is super cool and helped me validate the work I've already done with a calibration guide I wrote for the Samsung Neo G7 43" flat. I created an SDR and HDR ICC profile for 120cd/m2 with the X-Rite i1Display (Pro) Plus, which is now known as a Calibrite ColorChecker Display Plus. Couple things that may have already been covered by others. 1) I can confirm, from the testing I have done, Advanced is for an HDR calibrated ICC profile. 2) The option you suggested to enable Use Windows Display Calibration is, from what I have tested, related to the Microsoft calibration tool and creates an ICC profile when ised. So I suggest to disable, but it's moot unless you use that tool itself I believe. I would welcome your experienced eye on the guide I wrote and will refrain from posting the address unless you ask for it.
Imagine still having a disk or dvd drive on your pc or laptop.
i really recommend even to go further then shown in this movie:
if youre a pc enthusiast and care for a decent quality if your monitor i would suggest to invest into a monitor calibration tool to make your own monitor profiles. the difference in qualits is quite noticeable, even with new monitors direct from the shelf. i use my old spyder 5 elite from datacolor for over 10 yrs now and i've never regreted the investment of roundabout 300€ back then. the software from the tool does several color and brightness measurements of your monitor and compared them with the standard colors. then generates a color profile for the monitor that will be loaded everytime you start your computer. its a very noticeable difference, especially on older monitors. i renew the calibration every year, to keep it recent.
True I have a Spyder 4 pro and use it on a desktop and 2 laptops. The best thing about it is when you make a colour print the colours you get exactly match the colours on the monitor.
How to overclock monitor give tips&tricks to increase FPS
you have to overclock you graphics card to get more fps just search on youtube how to overclock (your graphics card) correctly
@@Luka-wg2zm u can oc the monitor as well
@@sunnycyberbum yeah but how
It's very hard, people can't sometimes even do it because you have to dissasemble the monitor and more
And by the way, overclocking DOESN'T increase any FPS.
this video was amazing, i didn't have idea about the cd, i use a icc profile that i found on internet and now everything looks better
95 percent of the time you don't need them
You need them every day, every minute!
I have now installed the Profile and the difference is so amazing! Thanks for this tip!😍
Nope, I'm not using my monitor wrong. Have to dislike your video for the catchy title, sorry but it is what it is.
Like and dislike is the same for UA-cam, what it matters is the reaction, it is what it is. 😎
So you're pro misleading people for profit? Says a lot about your character@@TheForce_Productions
@@PunkrockNoir-ss2pq I guess ometimes profits justify methods...
Irfanview is pretty nice for pictures. It also has color management. But the problem is it will embed those profiles onto the photo if you enable it. I still use it though.
Holy shit! Made such a big difference as soon as I applied! I tested a document that I only saw that there were different colors when I pasted something from this monitor to the another one! I just opened that document and it is now very obvious the color difference! Thank you!(Samsung SyncMaster 710N)
There will be different hex colors though. Be aware.
@@lolerie Thank you, I don't need super accurate colors, just being able to see better was more than good enough!(it was very hard to see selected text from not selected text in pgadmin before that). tks
When I change those color profiles, I immediately notice an issue. That's because the default profile in Windows was way off from the calibrated version I created myself. It's not just certain apps, it's the entire desktop experience.
I have a headache after watching this.
I've been using the Windows 7 photo app for so long I forgot that I switched it. I can't believe they would ever release the new one, especially learning this.
Hesitant to take advice but risked it and it worked! I've been Hesitant to take advice from Thio ever since the time I was laughing at myself the whole time I was un-taping batteries from my cat 5 cable.
Thanks man
You can also find decent monitors with a well-calibrated sRGB emulation mode built-in, so sRGB will look right out-of-the-box.
You're one of the few people who I still learn something about computers from.
for me it changed before my eyes now the colors are amazing ... thank you very much
Such a good video. Thanks so much. I was having so much color problems with my new monitor and installing the icc fixed it so quickly.
Thanks ThioJoe! Your intro is a perfect TL;DR, very clear and concise, with chapter marks on the different topics and everything. In just a minute I had a laugh and I learned why the specific ICC file for my monitor is very useful and why I can live without it but I definitely would rather have it. I don't think my cheap monitor has full sRGB gamut, hah, but this is great info, thanks a lot!
Glad you explained this. I am by no means a noob, but this windows color management software must be some of the most ridiculously convoluted crap I ever tried to use. These windows devs really do not understand windows users.
Your video was a great help! Many thanks!
Agree on howtogeek articles, always well written and properly edited. Also, defaulting the new uncorrected viewer likely has to do with the trend to supersaturate video outputs by popular demand. It was the same in cathode ray days. You would walk in at a restaurant and the expensive Sony Wega was set to dayglow colors. Give the people what they want, I guess.
many thanks for information, hobby photography here :-). One thing i have noticed, that windows 10 new default photoviewer actually uses monitors .icc profiles. I downloaded custom user icc profile for my VP2768, did everything like in video. Now, when i open one of my own pictures as .jpg files, and switch between official icc profile and a custom one, i see slight difference in colors. The magentas are more clear now.
Yes, they fixed it.
thanks, I can't install drivers on my monitor because I use adapter, but with this method I use .icc from my monitor driver and it looks now so cool
Bro I still wonder is there any video you make I don’t find interesting! Keep it up 🎉