by the way if your not using any hardware to calibrate your monitor to do your digital enhancements then what looks right to you may not be, specially if you intend to publish anything you do, because after you do post production, the actual print will not be the same.
Prints and publishing for electronic display are 2
very different things.
There are different electronic display device types, many of the same display type using differing operating system software, and a broad assortment browsing software, some of those color aware, some not color aware.
Of course if the electronic display device your digitally enhanced image isn't also calibrated exactly the same as your display device your carefully enhanced digtail image may not look the way you intended.
Soft proofing for prints in your editing application still only shows you an approximation of what a print will look like. It can be a close approximation if you use the right ICC profiles (print making device profile
and print paper profile) but still only an approximation.
Then the print has to be lit properly where ever it hangs to have any chance of looking like the soft proof you saw in your editing application.
But no doubt, routinely calibrating your display is essential if you want to have a solid foundation for doing any digital editing.