I generally do the same. Usually, outdoor shots are "as shot" for full
sun with the exception of very deep blue shade which I may partially
correct. But if the outdoor shots are portraits in shade then they will
likely be fully or near fully corrected. Indoor shots are likely to see
some partial correction unless done with flash.
Chuck Norcutt
On 4/17/2011 4:49 AM, Chris Barker wrote:
> I do as Ken suggested some years ago: leave the WB set for daylight
> and accept the colour casts as we did with film. I correct them only
> if they are unattractive.
>
> Chris
>
> On 17 Apr 2011, at 09:41, Nathan Wajsman wrote:
>
>> Thanks Moose, but you overdid the correction. On my monitor, your
>> "original" version looks much more yellow than mine, and conversely
>> your "corrected" version has a very unattractive magenta cast.
>>
>> I actually thought of color correcting a bit using Lightroom's
>> eyedropper tool, but in the end decided that I liked the warm
>> light. Besides, I posted this picture with very little artistic
>> intent, it was more to show the seriousness with which a Real-Barça
>> match is regarded here.
>
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