dylan_schumacher Posted September 22, 2008 Share Posted September 22, 2008 I have always been somewhat dissatisfied with the color quality from my Epson LCD projector (Powerlite 750c), and I am wondering if any real improvements have been made in high-quality digital projection of photographs in the last few years. I'm trying to project color managed photographs that have been digitally mastered to a high standard, but the projector, even when calibrated, always skews the colors because of its limited color space. Is there any solution? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
patricklavoie Posted September 22, 2008 Share Posted September 22, 2008 maybe you should try like anybody else to save your image as sRGB and from there have all kind of projector bieng able to produce nice image? I do a lot of presentation with different projector, and always find the color to be pretty good, after i open some bw and color test image to know the limit of this projector. My images are also color managed photographs that have been digitally mastered to a high standard, so yes quality is important to me, and srgb is the answer 9 out of 10 time...the other 1 could be the lamp that is close to be dead.: ) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dylan_schumacher Posted September 22, 2008 Author Share Posted September 22, 2008 The problem seems to be that most LCD projectors don't even display anything close to the complete sRGB colorspace, despite operating in that mode. I have tried converting files to sRGB for projection, and it doesn't really make a difference compared to letting the projector convert them on the fly. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
richsimmons Posted September 22, 2008 Share Posted September 22, 2008 Patrick is right, a bad lamp will affect color, but so will ambient light and other color distractions in the room you're showing it in. Even volumetric light will affect coloring and brightness. It's a decent machine, but it is in the lightweight class. Even with 2000 lumens. It only weighs about, what, four or five pounds? And I don't think it uses DLP either. I use an Eiki myself. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ncocco Posted April 10, 2009 Share Posted April 10, 2009 <p>I got a Panasonic ae2000pt a nice full-hd. it works good and has nice black, but I have HUGE problem cause it stretch my image , always at wvery resolution .<br> it's connected to a imac by a HDMI cable</p> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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