Jessie Eldora

Digital Photography - Colour Balancing


Posted: Sunday, July 17, 2011

by Jessie Eldora
gotmydigital.com

The human eye can easily adapt to different light conditions so that objects maintain their 'true' colour.

In fact, each type of light amplifies a certain colour in the spectrum. What we consider to be 'white' light only occurs during the noon hours of a clear day. Sunlight in the early evening or late afternoon gives everything a reddish tint, and cloudy days bring out the blue end of the spectrum.

Each type of artificial light also has a particular colour cast. Incandescent lighting is yellowish and fluorescent lighting can be either blue or green.

All of these different lighting conditions affect the colour balance in photographs.

Most digital cameras allow you to adjust the colour balance for different types of light. This can be done manually or automatically, although the automatic settings can produce uneven results from one picture to another.

Manual settings can be done by selecting a preset such as 'sunlight' or 'cloudy', but these settings can be fine-tuned to match very specific lighting conditions.

Colour balance is achieved by adjusting the camera so that 'white' is truly 'white'. Once the camera is set to correctly reproduce white, the other colours should appear to be their natural shade. This can be quickly checked by looking through the viewfinder of your digital camera. Holding up a piece of white paper in front of the camera will allow you to see whether it is the correct shade or not.

Some cameras can be set this way -- place a sheet of white paper in front of the viewfinder and select 'Auto Correct'.

Remember that the presets are general guidelines and may not be suitable for every type of lighting condition. If your camera has a setting for florescent lights, for example, it may still require further tweaking to get the correct colour balance.

Although it is best to try to get the proper colour balance when you are taking photographs, the colour of an image can also be adjusted using software. This should not be thought of as an alternative to proper colour balancing, but it can be used to good effect on some digital images.

Some computer software can automatically adjust colour as well as brightness and contrast. Start out with these 'auto' settings -- sometimes the results can be surprisingly good.

All colour is made up of the three primary colours -- red, green, and blue. Three other colours called the 'subtractive primary colours' are obtained by removing one of the primary colours where the other two are mixed. The three subtractive primary colours are yellow, cyan, and magenta.

This knowledge of how colours interact allows you to correct improper colour balances. For example, if an image is too red, adding some cyan (the opposite of red) can help to naturalize the colour.

Software can also be used to adjust colour intensity. Subtle use of imaging software can help to turn good photographs into great photographs.

Also Refer to my other article - Understanding the White Balance of the Digital Camera 

Other articles on Photography www.gotmydigital.com

If reprinting this article please give reference to my website.

   
Jessie Eldora Robertson is a Freelance writer & photographer also a seller of digital cameras & accessories, Art prints, and Scroll & Fretwork pictures on her estore/site; a young-spirited grandma keeping-up and keeping fit. http//:www.gotmydigital.com

To add to her interest in food, when Jessie was running a Family Daycare, she took food and health courses to have her cerificates, to know how to feed and have the best care for the children.

Jessie resides in the beautiful Cariboo Chilcotin area of British Columbia, Canada with her husband.

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Top-level comments on this article: (1 total)
» left by Lorrie Davids
302 days 6 hours ago.
96 fans.
Thank, Jessie, for writing a very helpful article. I have to confess; now that I use only digital cameras, it is easier to edit the photos later. After reading this, I want to check the manuals to see if an auto correct with white paper is available.
» left by Jessie Eldora 301 days 11 hours ago.
22 fans.
Lorrie, am glad you read your manuals. Just recently I lost all my pics of Quebec. Did not read the part about the auto mode changing for white balance. I tried to imporove it ... but with the card/stick having photos on. Since I was on holidays, I didn`t upload them to computer. Later, read the part about changing modes, and it said not to change modes unless your stick is empty!

One can purchase a grey card (white balancing), I don`t know much about that right now, planning on learning about it. - Happy photographing.
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