On the Color Calibration of Liquid Crystal Displays

Copyright 1999 Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers. This paper was (will be) published in SPIE Proceedings and is made available as an electronic reprint [preprint] with permission of SPIE. Single print or electronic copies for personal use only are allowed. Systematic or multiple reproduction, distribution to multiple locations through an electronic listserver or other electronic means, duplication of any material in this paper for a fee or for commericial purposes, or modification of the content of the pater are all prohibited. By choosing to view or print this document, you agree to all the provisions of the copyright law protecting it.

For more than a decade the Image Applications department at IBM's Watson Research Center has been involved in cultural and commercial imaging projects that demand high-fidelity color reproduction of precious objects like paintings, illuminated manuscripts or jewelry. Our primary display media have been high-resolution cathode ray tubes (CRT), but for the last three years our customers have been replacing them with liquid crystal displays (LCD). The color calibration model we have been using for the CRT is the one described in the literature. It assumes that the chromas of the primaries are independent of intensity, that the colors produced from them are additive and that the intensity of black is almost zero. We measured several models of LCD's and observed that they poorly satisfied these assumptions at medium to low intesities. This becomes noticeable if the image has dark areas of if the display is viewed under a weak ambient light. In this paper, we use a modified version of the CRT model to calibrate the LCD. First we measure four sets of red, green, blue and gray patches. Then we determine the correction factors needed to make, at each level, the sum of the primaries equal to the corresponding gray. Finally, we use these factors to modify the data of red, green and blue.

By: Albert Cazes, Gordon Braudaway, Jim Christensen, Mike Cordes, Don DeCain, Alan Lien, Fred Mintzer, Steve L. Wright

Published in: SPIE Proceedings, volume 3636, (no ), pages 154-16 in 1999

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