Hip hip hooray, you were talking about my relatives, the Daylight6000's. Isn't it great that nowadays one can change the colour balance of a light with a touch of a screen. No more gels that decreased the light output. Pity about the grips and gaffers losing their jobs.
The graphic artist got it right by using 5000K. They use this because when dealing with inks they need a light that is actually WHITE. Not BLUE...not GREEN...not magenta....not yellow.
visibly your screen is not calibrated properly, using a color picker your screen has pixel values severely lacking reds, the whites and greys are too cyan lol.
Great book reference. Matt’s reviews are phenomenal!
Agreed! Best lighting reviews in the business.
And as we have discussed, that's why I'll only buy bi color lights.. And my 600x showed up yesterday!
That’s awesome Pat. Great fixture.
Hip hip hooray, you were talking about my relatives, the Daylight6000's. Isn't it great that nowadays one can change the colour balance of a light with a touch of a screen. No more gels that decreased the light output. Pity about the grips and gaffers losing their jobs.
Just calibrated my monitor. My eyes.. I can see....
Nice!
The graphic artist got it right by using 5000K. They use this because when dealing with inks they need a light that is actually WHITE. Not BLUE...not GREEN...not magenta....not yellow.
Cool! Thanks for the insight.
visibly your screen is not calibrated properly, using a color picker your screen has pixel values severely lacking reds, the whites and greys are too cyan lol.
did you even watch til the end? 6:44 boom!