Computer Active (UK)

Manage your monitor settings

Make sure your PC monitor shows its true colours by making these tweaks

-

Before you start reading this article (and certainly before you start applying any of our tips here), open a photo on your PC and take a few seconds to look at it. Though it might look perfectly fine, the chances are that its reds aren’t really red, its blues are far from blue and its greens… well, you get the idea.

That’s because monitors don’t come pre- calibrated to suit the unique conditions of the room you are in, meaning what you see on screen is a far-from-accurate rendition. In fact manufactur­ers of PC monitors and TVS often crank up the brightness levels and oversatura­te colours so that their screens look vivid – even garish – in order to stand out on the shelf of your local PC World store.

That’s why it’s important to properly calibrate your monitor’s brightness, contrast and colour settings. This not only helps reduce eye strain, but displays photograph­s and images as they should be. Here we’ll explain how to tune up your monitor for a truer picture.

Brightness and contrast settings

The first step to accuracy is to ensure that brightness and contrast settings are at the correct levels. Usually you’d have to grapple with the fiddly controls on the front of your monitor to adjust these. Thankfully, you can make these tweaks more easily by using the free program Clickmonit­orddc.

Go to www.clickmonit­orddc.bplaced.net, scroll down and click the Download Clickmonit­orddc link. To open it doubleclic­k the ZIP file that downloads, then the ‘Clickmonit­orddc_3_0.exe’ file. After a few seconds you’ll see the program’s interface, which contains a series of sliders. Try moving the brightness and contrast sliders (see screenshot above) and you’ll see that your monitor’s display changes accordingl­y.

Next, dim the lighting in your room, then use an online calibratio­n aid known as a reference card to properly adjust your screen – Photo Friday’s card ( www. snipca.com/23044) is a good example. Press F11 to make the card full screen (press the Escape key to undo this) and pay particular attention to the horizontal bar along the top of the card. The segments of the bar (from true black to true white) should be distinct, while true black (on the far left) should look black, not grey. The other sections of the card can also help. For example, you should be able to see three concentric circles of black and white within the circular graphics on the left and right.

To adjust your screen, open Clickmonit­orddc by clicking its icon in

the notificati­ons area at the bottom-right of your taskbar. To see the icon you might have to click the up arrow (see screenshot at the bottom of page 60). Adjust the sliders until the Photo Friday calibratio­n aid displays correctly. If you want to double check the settings against a similar calibratio­n aid you can also use Screen Check ( www.photograph­erusa.com/screenchec­k).

Configure your colours

Now it’s time to adjust your monitor’s colour settings. Again, Clickmonit­orddc can make this process much easier. Open it and tick the RGB box in the top left corner, then choose User1 in the dropdown menu next to it. Three sliders will appear representi­ng red, green and blue (see screenshot left). If you don’t see User1 in the dropdown menu – some laptops and monitors may not give you the option – try using the Calibrize tool instead (see the next section).

It’s worth noting that rather like tuning a guitar by ear, you’ll never quite get your colour settings exactly right by sight alone. If absolute accuracy is important to you (because your career or hobby involves photo- or video-editing) your best option is to buy a digital colourimet­er (see box below). However, you can still make sure individual colours are distinct and appear accurate.

One of the best colour reference cards you can use is TFT Vanity’s Monitor Test Scale ( www.snipca.com/23052). The only downside is that you have to enable Flash in your browser to open it. When you first load the page you’ll see a brightness and contrast card that’s similar to Photo Friday’s version. But TFT Vanity’s card is even more detailed because its true black and true white are divided into gradients with one-per-cent difference­s. However, unless you have a profession­al-level monitor you won’t be able to tune it to make such fine margins visually distinct.

Instead move your cursor to the top of the web page to see the available settings and click Multiple under ‘Color range’ (see screenshot above). You’ll see a series of graded colours. Now adjust your SRGB settings using Clickmonit­orddc so that every colour looks correct at its 100-percent mark (on the right) and all show the same shade of black at the zero-per-cent mark (on the left). Finally, make sure each colour gradient is distinct from those either side of it. To help tune red, green and blue individual­ly you should select ‘Black/red grad.’, ‘Black/green grad.’ and ‘Black/blue grad.’ from the ‘Color range’ column.

Fine-tune your settings

Once you’ve changed your monitor settings so you’re reasonably happy with what you see, it’s still worth fine-tuning them using a second tool. Calibrize ( www.calibrize.com) – like Clickmonit­orddc – provides handy sliders for changing your colours. Download and install the program then follow the instructio­ns to make your adjustment­s.

Also try the 13 tests at www.lagom.nl/ lcd-test. Together they may take you up to an hour to complete, but it will be time well spent, especially if your screen currently leaves your eyes feeling tired.

Change the refresh rate

If you have ever noticed your screen flicker, it could be because its refresh rate isn’t set correctly. This determines how often the monitor updates what you see on screen, but if Windows is set to send that informatio­n at a rate faster (or slower) than your monitor can handle, you’ll see that annoying flicker.

To change the refresh rate in Windows 10, right-click a blank space on your desktop then click Display Settings. Next, click ‘Advanced display settings’ then ‘Display adapter properties’ (you’ll see it under ‘Related settings’). Click the Monitor tab and choose another refresh rate from the ‘Screen refresh rate’ dropdown menu (see screenshot above), then click Apply and (assuming the display looks good) ‘Keep settings’.

You should keep an eye on your display for flickering and if none occurs leave the refresh rate as it is. If flickering does continue, change the rate until the problem is resolved. To find the same refresh-rate dropdown menu in Windows 7, right-click the desktop and choose ‘Screen resolution’, then click ‘Advanced settings’ and click the Monitor tab.

 ??  ?? Make adjusting your monitor less fiddly by using Clickmonit­orddc’s display settings
Make adjusting your monitor less fiddly by using Clickmonit­orddc’s display settings
 ??  ?? Open Clickmonit­orddctordd­c bby clclicking one of its icons in the notificati­on area
Open Clickmonit­orddctordd­c bby clclicking one of its icons in the notificati­on area
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Use TFT Vanity’s Monitor Test Scale to correct your monitor’s colour Changing the refresh rate can help alleviate monitor flicker
Use TFT Vanity’s Monitor Test Scale to correct your monitor’s colour Changing the refresh rate can help alleviate monitor flicker
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom