I have pretty much, up to now, used auto WB for all outdoor stuff
figuring it is close enough so that the histogram and highlight
overexposure displays on the LCD are reasonably correct. They are
based on an analysis of the displayed jpeg with the camera's
settings. It does result in looking at each image though for fine
adjustment in post processing.
I am considering of taking up the practice of setting an arbitrary
white balance, hopefully close for metering purposes, for each
shooting session which allows correcting WB correction of on one
image in the session and then applying it to the other images in Bridge.
Winsor
Long Beach, California, USA
On Apr 8, 2007, at 2:21 PM, <chucknorcutt@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
<chucknorcutt@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> I admit pretty much the same. I shoot raw, almost always leave WB
> at daylight or flash (whichever I was shooting) and process the
> images into JPEG pretty much "as shot" except for a fair amount of
> exposure adjustments on flash shots. I make a lot of 1-2 stop
> errors when shooting manual flash on the fly. I tend to forget
> whether I'm shooting into or with the room lights which calls for
> different exposures depending on which way you're aiming the camera.
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