06-22-2015, 03:25 PM
Hey Matthew,
Hmmmmm, I honestly have no idea what's up with it looking normal with IE ._. that's strange af. But I don't think too many people use IE, so your main prob lies in Chrome and Firefox.
I used to have the same problem. Actually, I still tend to have the same problem if my blacks are at 10%; the thing is, you should try to avoid having any colour be at 10% or less, because depending on peoples monitors and how they're calibrated, you illustration may just end up super dark.
What I tend to do before posting anything online now is to adjust the levels so that there aren't any areas that are too dark ~10% and try to get them around 15-20% at the best.
After I've level adjusted and all that, I'd save it as a .PNG and send it to my phone to double check if the values look decent on a different display other than my poorly calibrated PC monitor. If everything looks g, I go ahead and post away.
I hope this helps ya in some way o/
Hmmmmm, I honestly have no idea what's up with it looking normal with IE ._. that's strange af. But I don't think too many people use IE, so your main prob lies in Chrome and Firefox.
I used to have the same problem. Actually, I still tend to have the same problem if my blacks are at 10%; the thing is, you should try to avoid having any colour be at 10% or less, because depending on peoples monitors and how they're calibrated, you illustration may just end up super dark.
What I tend to do before posting anything online now is to adjust the levels so that there aren't any areas that are too dark ~10% and try to get them around 15-20% at the best.
After I've level adjusted and all that, I'd save it as a .PNG and send it to my phone to double check if the values look decent on a different display other than my poorly calibrated PC monitor. If everything looks g, I go ahead and post away.
I hope this helps ya in some way o/