![]() There are some excellent reviews on that site I linked to above. The BenQ range is a lot cheaper than the Eizo and NEC equivalents and has developed an excellent reputation among imaging professionals. That is why I mentioned the BenQ monitor which can be calibrated and profiled using a hardware calibrator such as the i1 discussed above. What can be done probably depends on the iMac version You can measure and adjust the luminance but I am not sure if you can adjust the colour through hardware calibration and profiling. In my understanding, it is correct to say that you can only perform a fairly basic calibration of certain monitors including those on the iMacs. This article on the difference between calibrating and profiling is probably the best explanation I have read. I use a colorchecker passport to profile my camera sensor then I use NEC Spectraview to profile my monitor and you could profile your printer or get a color profile from a commercial printer. Best practice is to profile the entire imaging process from capture to print so there are no surprises. Monitor profiling can be done with off the shelf software/hardware and makes a color corrected profile for a monitor that other color aware software can use to display corrected colors. Monitor calibration (adjusting the internal LUT table or other internal adjustments) can only be done on high end monitors with their proprietary software.
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