I just calibrated my monitor for the first time using a Spyder 3 Pro. It has corrected a previous inconsistency between screen and printer. Basically, my prints were coming out about -0.5 stop compared to on-screen. I guessed that what I was seeing on screen was too bright but I was adjusting edits in CS5 to suit it. In other words, I was turning down the exposure in edit, and when I sent them to print with CS5 handling the printing, it printed them too dark.
My monitor is fairly new (Samsung 2232bw) and I didn't have this problem with my old monitor even though it wasn't calibrated.
Most of my posted images on here now look a little dull and muddy, compared to before calibration. Such as this one
OK, I thought, let's have a look at someone else's - Donald!
This one in mono comp #90 by Donald looked a bit border-line on exposure yesterday, but it was just OK on my monitor (which was showing too much brighness, remember).
Looking at it now it looks much darker than yesterday. I sent it to my CS5 and added an exposure layer of +0.6 stop, which made it look much better. Here is the comparison before then after.
Quite a difference. Then I printed them out, side by side, using my Epson R2400 (good quality printer) as you see above and the print result is even more striking. The one on the right, with extra exposure looks considerably better.
I'm not quite sure about this, and perhaps Colin can advise. If we all had the same monitor model, and they were all calibrated the same, we should all see the same levels of an image on CiC. If we each printed them out on the same printer, using the same profiles, they should all look the same on print.
But in the real world, if Donald is looking at his print above and thinks it looks just about right, and to me it looks too dark, the chances are based on this test that his prints will look quite dark. No?
Spyder 3 Pro calibrators are about £100 from Amazon. Spyder 3 Pro on Amazon
Donald - if you want to PM me your address, I will post the comparison print to you. It shows quite a difference.
Looking at some of other people's posted shots here on CiC, some that looked over-exposed before now look quite good, and some that looked too dark, now look even darker. If anyone wants to post a link here to one of their shots I'll let you know what it looks like on my monitor. If I think it needs adjustment, I can edit it and print it to check what it looks like.