
Today on the TruHu Blog: how to reduce, filter, and completely remove light leaks, reflections, and glare from your photos using three methods.

Most monitors shouldn't be set to 100 brightness as it will age your backlight. Here's how to set contrast and brightness to match your viewing environment.

How to edit astrophotography from lens correction to noise reduction. We walk you through everything you need for your astrophotography editing workflow.

Explore the differences between TruHU and colorimeter-based monitor calibration products, from accuracy to price, metamerism, luminance, and more.

M1 and M2 Apple MacBooks handle color profiles on the built-in XDR display differently than previous models. See how to change the color profile manually.

Adobe Creative Cloud has sophisticated color-handling features, but you can also end up with mismatched color profiles. Here's how to fix those in Adobe CC.

Most displays can achieve an sRGB color gamut, which is the de facto standard for viewing images. So do you actually need a large gamut display? Let's see!

Does it really matter? Let's put it this way: it all depends on your working environment and if your screen is the brightest element in that environment.

What goes into the quality of white light? How can you determine that? Let's go in depth and look at the spectral power distribution of white light.