Photography podcast #106 discusses the often confusing topic of white balance and why sometimes the camera screws up our images like giving us blue snow. Correcting this is really easy and it just requires a bit of understanding of what is going on in the background. In a very tight oversimplified nutshell, when we see something that has colour, it has that colour due to the colour temperature of the light source illuminating it.
Light a candle in a dark room and look at a white baseball; it will look orange. The same thing happens with white snow that looks bluish under cloudy overcast conditions because cloudy light is bluish. Our eyes might not notice the blue because our brain compensates for the cast because it “knows” that snow is white, but the camera often gets it wrong. In this podcast we talk about white balance, automatic white balance, the white balance presets that your camera comes with and setting a custom white balance. If you’ve ever wanted to improve the colour accuracy of your images, this photo podcast offers up some fast tips.
![Colors and color temperature in photography Colors and color temperature in photography](http://www.photography.ca/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/photo-podcast-106-image-a.jpg)
Left image — When we see an object that has colour, it has that colour due to the color temperature of the light source illuminating it. This is why if we take a white baseball into a room lit only by a candle, the baseball looks orange. The same thing happens when we take a picture of white snow on a cloudy overcast day and it looks blue. Right image — White light (the kind we see at noon on a sunny cloudless day) is actually made up of equal parts of Red, Blue and Green light. These are the primary colours in photography.
![Blue snow in photography Blue snow in photography](http://www.photography.ca/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/photo-podcast-106-image-1.jpg)
Left Image — The camera’s AWB (automatic white balance) didn’t render this scene properly and the snow looks bluish because the day was cloudy and cloudy light is bluish. Right Image — I corrected this in post processing and the snow looks more natural to the eye.
- If your image has a colour cast, to neutralize it, you add the OPPOSITE colour of the cast.
![Mixed lighting in photography Mixed lighting in photography](http://www.photography.ca/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/photo-podcast-106-image-31.jpg)
This image was lit with 2 light sources; the light coming from the stove AND overcast light coming in through the windows. AWB does a very good job here but is a hint too warm. The cloudy preset adds yellow to compensate for cloudy light which is blue. In this case it reproduces too warm. The Incandescent preset adds blue to compensate for incandescent light which is warm. Here it added way too much blue. The custom setting, where you take a quick reading from a grey card or use a tool like an Expodisc was the most accurate and best reproduced the scene.
Links /resources mentioned in this podcast:
Spinrite - To recover crashed hard drives
Allan Levene is running for congress!
Grey cards at B&H — Expodisc at B&H — Color meters at B&H
Photography tours in Montreal — One to one photography instruction by yours truly
- Wide open aperture is our regular forum assignment for May
– Texture is our level 2 forum assignment for May
If you liked this podcast and want to review it on Itunes, this link gets you to the main page
If you are interested in writing for our blog please contact me photography.ca ( A T ) G m ail Dot co m (using standard email formatting)
Please join the Photography.ca fan page on Facebook
My Facebook profile — Feel free to “friend” me — please just mention Photography.ca
My Twitter page — I will follow you if you follow me — Let’s connect — PLEASE email me and tell me who you are in case I don’t reciprocate because I think you are a spammer.
If you are still lurking on our forum,
feel free to join our friendly Photography forum
Thanks to Rob vE, Yisehaq and Robertv in Edinburgh who posted blog comments about our last podcast. Thanks as always to everyone that sent comments by email about our last podcast. Although ALL comments are appreciated, commenting directly in this blog is preferred. Thanks as well to all the new members of the bulletin board. Most of the links to actual the products are affiliate links that help support this site. Thanks in advance if you purchase through those links.
If you are looking at this material on any other site except Photography.ca — Please hop on over to the Photography.ca blog and podcast and get this and other photography info directly from the source. |Subscribe with iTunes|Subscribe via RSS feed |Subscribe with Google Reader|Subscribe for free to the Photography podcast — Photography.ca and get all the posts/podcasts by Email
You can download this photography podcast directly by clicking the preceding link or listen to it almost immediately with the embedded player below.
Thanks for listening and keep on shooting!
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
Wow! This is wonderful article. Thank you for posting this. This is very informative and useful. Many photographers will enjoy this. Great job!
Another great podcast marko and now I have more settings to play with…