I found Elle's article good for the general understanding of the concepts. 
Based on your use case you can do both calibration and profiling, or just 
one of them:
http://ninedegreesbelow.com/photography/monitor-profile-calibrate-confuse.
html
(http://ninedegreesbelow.com/photography/monitor-profile-calibrate-confuse.html)

"calibrating your monitor affects both the hardware (the global effect you 
are seeing) and the software. You need both to get accurate colors. 

The hardware (calibration per se) part consists in configuring the graphics 
card's LUT to get a good approximation of colors. The second part is 
profiling your screen and the result is used by color-managed software. If I
understood correctly, the profile tells the software both how to render each
color and which color cannot be rendered (used to know which pixel is out of
gamut on screen). 

If you use dispcal (https://displaycal.net/), then both steps are explicitly
shown in the UI. 

What's both nice and confusing is that both informations are stored in the 
same file (.icc). 

-- 
Matthieu Moy 
http://www-verimag.imag.fr/~moy/ 

"____________________________________________________________________________
darktable user mailing list
to unsubscribe send a mail to [email protected]

Reply via email to