You¹re correct that high color temps give blue light, which I explained in
detail on the third page.
--
Chris Crawford
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On 2/2/17, 6:47 PM, "olympus on behalf of John Hudson"
<olympus-bounces+chris=chriscrawfordphoto.com@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx on behalf
of OM4T@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>Chris .....In the section entitled "Wht It Is Necessary" you write that
>"......if the light is cool in colour your photograph will look blue
>......."
>
>My experience is that photos taken just after sunset, when the sun is
>below the horizon, the sky will gradually turn from setting sun red to a
>blue-ish tinge. The Kelvin degree temperature of the blue-ish tinged sky
>will zoom up to +10,000K which makes the colour temperature not "cool"
>but "hot".
>
>You might like to add the word "visually" immediately ahead of both
>"cool" and "hot". Kelvin temperature wise, red is a lot colder than blue.
>
>Hopefully that is correct.
>
>jh
>
>
>
>
>
>
>On 2/2/2017 6:09 PM, Christopher Crawford wrote:
>> I have just added a new tutorial to my Photo Lessons website!
>>
>> White Balance Demystified
>> <http://crawfordphotoschool.com/digital/whitebalance/index.php>
>>
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