I'd just set the camera to "daylight" and forget the custom white
balance. Custom white balance is nice at times but it can destroy our
bluish shaded areas and reddish early morning and late afternoon light.
Just pretend you're shooting daylight balanced film and don't have
10,000 custom color filters at your beck and call.
Chuck Norcutt
Jez Cunningham wrote:
> Hi,
> I've had fun this weekend taking (digital, raw) pictures of snow
> scenes in the Ardennes. If I set the white balance to make the snow
> neutral white I lose the slight blueness that we are accustomed to see
> (which makes the scene look cold...).
> Does anyone have a good process to get the 'right' white balance or a
> recommended temperature setting?
> cheers
> Jez in snowy Belgium
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