Any colorist here? I have seen that there are many people who choose Apple to work in the audiovisual industry. I have found that there are two options for screens:
-Standard glass
-Nano-texture glass
Apple's nano-texture glass has a matte finish. Here's what Apple says about the nano-texture:
If you’re in an especially uncontrolled lighting environment, there’s an innovative matte option with nano-texture glass. Typical matte displays have a coating added to their surface that scatters light. However, these coatings lower contrast while producing unwanted haze and sparkle. Etched into the glass at the nanometer level, the nano-texture scatters light to further minimize glare — for outstanding image quality even in challenging lighting conditions. The nano-texture glass option comes with a polishing cloth that’s made with soft, nonabrasive material for safe cleaning.
And this about the standard glass:
Standard glass has an industry-leading anti-reflective coating for viewing comfort and readability.
The truth is that the standard display still reflects a lot of light. Here is a comparison I have found. Off / On:
220703-screens-off-jpg.2025762.jpg
220703-screens-on-jpg.2025761.jpg
Some people say that nano-texture also affects colors a lot and destroys image quality. They even go so far as to say that buying a nano-textured display is ruining an OLED. Others say that colors are better because, according to them, glossy screens show overly saturated colors.
So I wonder, what kind of screens are used today for professional color grading? matte or glossy? Colorist work requires a lot of work in front of a screen so I imagine a matte screen would reduce eye strain. But if it really ruins contrast and color I guess matte screens will be avoided at the professional level.
Or does it not matter if the display is matte or glossy as long as you adjust it with a good professional calibration software?
-Standard glass
-Nano-texture glass
Apple's nano-texture glass has a matte finish. Here's what Apple says about the nano-texture:
If you’re in an especially uncontrolled lighting environment, there’s an innovative matte option with nano-texture glass. Typical matte displays have a coating added to their surface that scatters light. However, these coatings lower contrast while producing unwanted haze and sparkle. Etched into the glass at the nanometer level, the nano-texture scatters light to further minimize glare — for outstanding image quality even in challenging lighting conditions. The nano-texture glass option comes with a polishing cloth that’s made with soft, nonabrasive material for safe cleaning.
And this about the standard glass:
Standard glass has an industry-leading anti-reflective coating for viewing comfort and readability.
The truth is that the standard display still reflects a lot of light. Here is a comparison I have found. Off / On:
220703-screens-off-jpg.2025762.jpg
220703-screens-on-jpg.2025761.jpg
Some people say that nano-texture also affects colors a lot and destroys image quality. They even go so far as to say that buying a nano-textured display is ruining an OLED. Others say that colors are better because, according to them, glossy screens show overly saturated colors.
So I wonder, what kind of screens are used today for professional color grading? matte or glossy? Colorist work requires a lot of work in front of a screen so I imagine a matte screen would reduce eye strain. But if it really ruins contrast and color I guess matte screens will be avoided at the professional level.
Or does it not matter if the display is matte or glossy as long as you adjust it with a good professional calibration software?
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