But, for professional photographers, and graphics designers, accurate colors are very important. Different monitors may even have slightly different colors depending on the graphics card in the computer they’re connected to. Not all computer monitors look identical. While color profiles are often used for displays, you can also find and install color profiles for a printer to help it print more accurate colors. This color profile (attached) is for a mid-2009 13' Macbook Pro with a LP133WX3-TLA1 display panel (0610-9C9F). I just did a visual calibration of my new Mac using SuperCal. Hi I know you need a proper monitor but I'm curious to know if there are any MacBook Pro color settings that even come close to providing the best accurate reference for color correction work for broadcast. That is why the display profile that best matches your screen is always the one that is generated by a hardware calibrator used on your specific monitor and no one. The one marked 'Color LCD' is the generic factory profile for the monitor and it is the best starting point, but I don't think it's tuned for each specific Mac coming off the line. But if you find that these colors look odd, or don't match. Macs use a default color profile-a group of color settings-for each connected display. Get the right colors on your Mac display. You can install them on your Windows PC or Mac to help get more accurate colors. Color profiles, also known as ICC or ICM files, contain a collection of settings that help calibrate how colors appear on your monitor.
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