Dommy73 wrote:TBM wrote:No. Even if you have a display that isn't calibrated, you can look at an image of a jersey online and compare it to the jersey in the game, both images being on the same monitor. While the colors may be inaccurate compared to real life, the comparison isn't real life vs. an image through a computer monitor. It's an image through a computer monitor vs. another image from the same computer monitor. Unless the monitor is literally black and white, you can still differentiate colors just fine on even the shittiest monitor.
There is your problem. You're comparing it to some pictures that were taken under certain conditions, modified and might carry their own profiles.
Let's see... 4 photos, 4 different hues due to various reasons. At least 3 of them are wrong then. How do we tell which one is the correct one? And we are now comparing images through a computer monitor...
[ Image ][ Image ][ Image ][ Image ]
Sure, they all are very slightly different (and tbh, 1 2 and 4 are pretty much the exact same color, so that isn't helping your argument), but none of them are different colors in the same way the Cavs jersey is. In your example, you're talking about very slightly different brightnesses.That's not at all the case for the Cavs jersey. One is very plum, and the other is red.