Honestly you won't even be able to tell if color is a little off or not unless it's a side-by-side comparison. And for me, one of my eyes sees more vibrant color than the other, so I'm used to it.
There is a difference between things looking "good enough" and complaining that "this orange is slightly too orangey compared to this orange".
The latter honestly sounds like petty complaining.
If a properly calibrated monitor is still showing yellow as yellow and red as red, what does it matter? If the colors are off so much to where red is nearing magenta then something is calibrated incorrectly to begin with.
As for cards, I doubt there is any difference at all outside of possibly saturation/brightness/contrast default levels.
It matters because you care enough to care about it. Just like I care enough about my music to like only specific songs in genres, I can care enough about the reproduction of images to be withing a certain margin of error in the reproduction of its aesthetic pieces, specifically the color.
You're right that the differences are usually not great enough to care enough about to try and force any kind of change other than personal, but then I'm not trying to say anyone should really care about it outside of personal interest.
but then I'm not trying to say anyone should really care about it outside of personal interest.
Sure, but the opposite seems to be what OP is implying.
Unless he is doing professional work, colors don't matter much.
Even then, after the project is done they usually go and "flatten" the colors so the everyday person will see it the same as everyone else (since everyone sees color vibrancy differently).
Sure, but the opposite seems to be what OP is implying.
Unless he is doing professional work, colors don't matter much.
Even then, after the project is done they usually go and "flatten" the colors so the everyday person will see it the same as everyone else (since everyone sees color vibrancy differently).
Well, yes. I was just trying to say that color discrepancies certainly do exist between the cards. Though if you're going to be so picky as to point them out then practically all cards produce 'wrong' colors, to some extent. Negligible or practical to care about or not.
It matters because you care enough to care about it. Just like I care enough about my music to like only specific songs in genres, I can care enough about the reproduction of images to be withing a certain margin of error in the reproduction of its aesthetic pieces, specifically the color.
You're right that the differences are usually not great enough to care enough about to try and force any kind of change other than personal, but then I'm not trying to say anyone should really care about it outside of personal interest.
Unless he is doing professional work, colors don't matter much.
Even then, after the project is done they usually go and "flatten" the colors so the everyday person will see it the same as everyone else (since everyone sees color vibrancy differently).
Well, yes. I was just trying to say that color discrepancies certainly do exist between the cards. Though if you're going to be so picky as to point them out then practically all cards produce 'wrong' colors, to some extent. Negligible or practical to care about or not.