Let me start by thanking the friends who have shared kind words and thoughts with me about the loss of Lucy. I still cannot look at her photo without feeling a deep sense of loss. It will take time. In the interest of trying to deal with this, I thought it would be a good exercise for me talk about something I love to do (photography) and give myself something to focus on that is positive. So here is a new post created with an idea from a photo class I just finished with Tony Sweet over at Betterphoto.com.
I wonder how many people learned about white balance the way I did. It was March of 2004, and I had just received my first digital camera, the Canon 10D. I was so excited about using this new digital technology, I just put the lens on the camera and began to shoot images in my living room. Wow! There they are, my pictures right there on the LCD screen. I can see my work without having to wait days for a photo lab to churn out my prints. Very cool! When I proudly showed my LCD photos to Meg, she curiously asked, "why are they orange?".
Orange? What do you mean orange!? Didn't you mean to say, "that's a really cool composition of the couch." Or even, "Wow, that wide angle lens takes in almost the whole room." But no, you had to ask "why are they orange?" OK, so she had hurt my pride a little by not noticing the depth of my creativity with living room furniture photography, but I'll get over that. She just doesn't know how to see yet. I've been shooting images for years, she's an amateur. But you know what? She has a point. Why the heck are these pictures orange?
And that is the story of how I learned about white balance. Anyone who has taken photos indoors with standard tungsten lights as the light source knows that even the camera's Auto White Balance setting will produce photos with a slightly orange color cast. What a frustrating discovery.
Now it's three years later and I've come to master how to get the right white balance (WB) before and even after the shot if necessary. In critical situations I use a white card and create a Custom WB setting for the camera. Most often, I just use one of the presets that my camera offers that matches the shooting situation.
Well, last month, my eyes were opened to some new possibilities of utilizing white balance. Getting an accurate white balance isn't always the most interesting interpretation of a scene. Why not consider changing the Kelvin settings to change the interpretation?
The Kelvin scale is simply a method used to measure color temperature. The idea is that changing the Kelvin setting allows you to greatly change the mood/feeling of a scene. A lower Kelvin setting (smaller number) gives a cooler feel to a scene, while a higher Kelvin (higher number) feels warmer. These Kelvin settings can be done manually in-camera or after the fact in a RAW converter if you shoot RAW images.
This concept can be particularly powerful when you have a colorful sky to work with, as I did in this images:
Original, AWB Setting:
Custom WB, Kelvin set to 3000:
Custom WB, Kelvin set to 13200:
Who knew that playing with white balance could be so fun!? I used to despise the effort needed to get an accurate WB. Now that I've been made aware of an entirely new set of possibilities I hadn't considered before, I'm really starting to enjoy the flexibility the WB settings give me. It's like having 100 different types of film and filters inside built right into the camera. Tony Sweet, a professional nature photographer admits that his prolific use of colored lens filters has greatly been replaced with this method of manually adjusted WB.
One final note: If you ever needed a reason to shoot RAW images versus Jpeg, this is it. Being able to go in your RAW converter after the fact and easily adjust the WB for image interpretation is one of the simplest and most powerful tools available in the digital era of photography.
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