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Sometimes you have to specify with your printing company that you do not want them to "auto-correct" your images. Many companies make the bill off of folks printing straight from their Point and shoots. So they bump the contrast and bump the saturation to make people happier. I have to specifically tell the place I go to when I need fast cheap prints to turn off the auto correction.
Of course. I have a calibrated monitor. I don
5D mark III, 50D, 17-40 f4L, 24-70 f2.8L, 70-200 f4L IS, 28 f1.8, 50 f1.8, 85 f1.8, 100 f2.8 Macro
What does "accentuate the shadows" mean? Do you mean that shadows appear brighter than you expect? Or darker? Something else?
The most typical problem is that prints are too dark, and it
I have the same problem with cosco prints. I calibrated one of my monitors to agree with a specific costco nearby, and that helped.
Seems like you should be able to tell them how your monitor is calibrated, and have them match the print to that, but it doesn
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Oh Man you guys have me freaking out now. I just ordered some prints for the first time EVER. I ordered them directly from Apple via Aperture. Surely the don
Originally Posted by Sean Setters
Thanks for the great idea. I'm going to start doing this.
Thanks for all who
Originally Posted by erno james
In that case, try getting some bright photo paper (or any "bright" paper even) and hold it up next to your monitor. If the white on your monitor is a lot whiter than the white on your paper, that may be part of the reason why the prints are too dark. If you reduce brightness on the monitor, it may be easier to get the prints to match.