I live in South Africa, in a small town in Kwazulu Natal, namely Richards bay. I can with great confidence recommend any of the game reserves in that area. (Kwazulu Natal) i.e Tembe Elephant park, Imfolozi game reserve, Mkuze water falls lodge, check out this site https://www.afristay.com/a/kwazulu-natal/game-lodges/
[quote=rook2c4]Exactly! Here's an example: Let's say, I want to photograph a lit light bulb in a dark room. I want to capture detail of the bulb, filament .....
Pablo8 wrote: If I was in that quandary, I would make up my own mind...……. or not bother going. I see your occupation is listed as analyst. (?) Good at your job?
I'm retired. Thank you for the thoughtful and absolutely mindlessly useless response.
Thank you All. It is irritating when you edit a photo, and when you look at it on another monitor it looks different, in a bad way. I use Light room 5.
I am fairly new to photography and editing. I Edit on my laptop(as I work away from home). I decided to purchase a monitor to make life easier. I was disappointed to see the difference in colour between the two. Now the question is it worth the while to get something like the "spyder monitor calibrator"? Will it synchronize the two screens? This may have come up before, and I apologise for bringing it up again.