Are you a student? are you a photographer?
Enjoy this photography guide.
What is White Balance?
White balancing your camera to the ‘color’ of the light you are
shooting means adjusting the colors so that they look more natural to the human
eye.
All light sources have a specific measurement on the color
temperature scale. This scale is called the Kelvin scale, and all colors of
light are measured in Kelvins. This
is why, if you have ever looked at your camera’s custom white balance numbers,
they have a ‘K’ after them.
Not all light sources have an equal color temperature. If you
think of bright light like normal daylight, or studio lights, they tend to have
a temperature around 5,550K, which is about halfway up the scale. A candle
flame has a warmer, redder light, and is about 1850-1930K. At the other end of
the scale is pure blue sky from a north-facing source. This comes in at
10,000K. It’s easier to think of the scale as going from dark, warm orange at
the lower end to bright, cold blue at the higher end.
Our brain automatically adjusts to these changes in color
temperature. If you looked at a white piece of paper under a fluorescent light,
then took it outside in the sun, you’d still see a white piece of paper. A
camera doesn’t have that ability, which is why we need to tell it what color
temperature the light is so that it can accurately adjust the colors to show
true white – regardless of whether you’re shooting in candlelight or in bright
blue daylight.
Yes, you can choose auto white balance mode on your camera, but
sometimes it’s not good at judging the color temperature and that is when you
end up with a horrible blue or orange cast to your images.
This image above looks like it was shot under tungsten light
without being white balanced. See the yellowy-orange cast that everything has?
Can’t I Just Change
White Balance in Post Processing Instead?
Yes, you can – if you shoot in RAW format. You can change the
white balance to any that you like best in Lightroom, because a RAW
image stays unprocessed by the camera, and any settings it applies are for
reference only, they do not affect the actual image.
If you shoot JPEG’s, however, you can’t change it in post. You
can try, but I bet you won’t like the results. So you’ll have to learn to white
balance for any given lighting situation.
Personally, although I shoot in RAW format almost exclusively, I
always set my white balance before a shoot. It just saves time in
post-processing, and I can see the colors rendered accurately as I shoot on my
LCD or tethered PC screen. Sometimes I have forgotten to change the white
balance and only remembered halfway through a shoot, but as I shoot in RAW it’s
not a problem.
How to Manually Calculate White Balance
It’s not hard, and it doesn’t take long. You can buy a special
white balance card, or you can use a piece of white paper. Simply put the paper
in the scene you’re photographing in the light you’re using, and fill the
viewfinder with the paper so that nothing else shows. You may need to put
your lens on to manual
focus to do this, as your autofocus will struggle to find something to focus on
in all that white, but most lenses have a switch on the side which allows you
to go back and forth between the two.
Take a couple of images, then go into your custom white balance
menu on your camera. It will ask you which of the suitable images you want to
use to set white balance. Choose one, set it, and your images will come out
looking good whether you’re in tungsten lighting or outside on a cloudy day.
This image of snow covered trees is very blue in the shadows,
and could do with the white balance adjusting to make it slightly warmer – in
my opinion! Snow scenes can be tricky to shoot though.
How to Change White Balance in Camera
The process varies according to your camera manufacturer. As a
Canon shooter, I press the ‘Q’ button on the back, and select white balance. It
gives you a range of options for preset white balances, from tungsten through
to cloudy, and the option for dialing in any Kelvin values you want. To create
a custom white balance on Canon, you have to go into the main menu and select
‘custom white balance’ as I mentioned above.
If you don’t know how to change the white balance on your
camera, I suggest looking at the instruction manual to find out how, or
searching for info online.
How to Change White Balance in Lightroom
Go in to the ‘develop’ module of Lightroom, and have your image
up on the screen. On the right-hand side, you will see the ‘white balance’
drop-down menu like the one below:
This gives you a range of preset white balances which you can
apply to your image. Underneath the drop-down you will find a manual white
balance adjuster, with two sliders labeled ‘temp’ and ‘tint.’ You can type the
values in, or move the sliders.
You can also sync your new settings to other photos in the same
collection, so that with one click of a button, they all have the same white balance.
Simply change the white balance on your first image, then select all the photos
that you wish to make the same in the filmstrip at the bottom of the screen,
and click the ‘sync’ button at the bottom of the develop module:
You can use the sync feature to replicate any changes to one
image across them all. It’s a real time saver!
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