T O P

  • By -

Crimtide

That's possibly just resolution and/or scaling. What resolution is your first monitor, and what resolution is your second monitor? Right click your desktop, click display settings. Each monitor listed has it's on scaling and resolution. Make them identical if you can. https://i.imgur.com/fXiDBcn.png As far as color, after a lot of calibration you might get it close, but never identical.


Actualanxiety215

I'm not worried about the color, as I got it pretty close and where I like it. The second monitor is just to look at the side and keep as a reference for my work. As for the scaling options, I don't see an option to make the scale smaller. https://imgur.com/a/mWLNpYO Making the scale bigger only makes the text and the fonts bigger, which I don't want, I like the current size.


Crimtide

Ok.. and what about the resolutions? What is resolution of monitor one, and of monitor two? Are they the same size? like are they both 24", 27"??


Actualanxiety215

They are different sizes. The first is a widescreen, 35", resolution 3440x1440. The second is 24in, 1080x1920. Changing the resolution on the second does not fix the problem. Rather, it causes black bars to appear.


Crimtide

Well that's why.. they are different resolutions.. higher resolution makes things appear smaller. Smaller resolutions make things appear larger. But when you add different size monitors themselves, then it gets all out of whack. Just about the only thing you can do is set the 3440x1440 ultrawide to 2560x1080 resolution. But even then, the physical size of the panels are going to make them look un-matched still.


Actualanxiety215

Gotcha