Adobe photoshop cs2 사용자 설명서

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ADOBE PHOTOSHOP CS2 
User Guide 
Monitor calibration involves adjusting the following video settings, which may be unfamiliar to you. 
Brightness and contrast 
The overall level and range, respectively, of display intensity. These parameters work just 
as they do on a television. Adobe Gamma helps you set an optimum brightness and contrast range for calibration. 
Gamma 
The brightness of the midtone values. The values produced by a monitor from black to white are 
nonlinear—if you graph the values, they form a curve, not a straight line. Gamma defines the value of that curve 
halfway between black and white. 
Phosphors 
The substances that CRT monitors use to emit light. Different phosphors have different color character­
istics. 
White point 
The color and intensity of the brightest white the monitor can reproduce. 
To calibrate and profile your monitor 
When you calibrate your monitor, you are adjusting it so it conforms to a known specification. Once your monitor 
is calibrated, the profiling utility lets you save a color profile. The profile describes the color behavior of the 
monitor—what  colors  can or cannot be displayed  on  the monitor  and how  the numeric  color values in an image  must  
be converted so that colors are displayed accurately. 
Make sure your monitor has been turned on for at least a half hour. This gives it sufficient time to warm up and 
produce more consistent output. 
Make sure your monitor is displaying thousands of colors or more. Ideally, make sure it is displaying millions of 
colors or 24-bit or higher. 
Remove colorful background patterns on your monitor desktop and set your desktop to display neutral grays. 
Busy patterns or bright colors surrounding a document interfere with accurate color perception. 
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Do one of the following to calibrate and profile your monitor: 
In Windows, use the Adobe Gamma utility, located in the Control Panel. 
In Mac OS, use the Calibrate utility, located in the System Preferences/Displays/Color tab. 
For the best results, use third-party software and measuring devices. In general, using a measuring device such as 
a colorimeter along with software can create more accurate profiles because an instrument can measure the colors 
displayed on a monitor far more accurately than the human eye. 
Note: Monitor performance changes and declines over time; recalibrate and profile your monitor every month or so. If 
you find it difficult or impossible to calibrate your monitor to a standard, it may be too old and faded. 
Most profiling software automatically assigns the new profile as the default monitor profile. For instructions on how 
to manually assign the monitor profile, refer to the Help system for your operating system.