I am looking to refine my editing environment now that I have redecorated it.
I have pale to mid grey walls, a white ceiling and several white cupboard doors behind me. The window is fairly small (about 1 square metre / 1 square yard) with a grey blackout vertical blind so I can reduce the amount of daylight significantly. It potentially allows daytime and night time light levels to be similar.
There is a ceiling light fitting with 3 spotlights that do not point toward the screen but can provide some general illumination. The bulbs are a tad on the blue side but are the best I could find: 6500K, 575 lumens, CRI 90, dimmable, made by Phillips.
I am about to recalibrate my BenQ monitor for its new surroundings. I realise that the brightness of the environment will affect my perception of the displayed image and can lead to a mismatch between the on-screen image and the printed result.
I also recall Manfred saying his environment has about 70 lux and others a bit higher. I cannot find any tips on how to measure the lux value in the absence of an incident lightmeter. Can a sheet of white paper and a camera’s (reflective) lightmeter be used to arrive at a suitable brightness?
In the UK a lightmeter (Sekonic L-208 Twinmate) costs about GBP125 (USD150) which I am reluctant to spend as it would have no other value for me.
I have a feeling this has been touched on before but my searches have not come up with anything. If I am overthinking this feel free to tell me.