Hey, I have been working with white balance lately and I'm trying to sort them from blue to red.
After viewing the manual and following the link:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_point
I have sorted them in this order. But, my actualy tests are not following the charts. For some reason A is more blue than any of them yet it looks red according to the chart and temperature.
Is this a bug that A shows up blue or do I not understand what is going on?
Thanks!
White Balance A showing blue instead of red
White Balance A showing blue instead of red
Content contained in my posts is for informational purposes only and is used at your own risk.
The color shows what is considered to be white tone in the scene. It is not an image filter that makes the image more red or blue.
For example A is used for regular light bulbs. The regular bulb is sooo yellow. When you use A, then the bulb color is taken as white and it will be presented as white on the image (without using A for white balance the bulb would be yellow).
So as far as I understand, then that color in Wiki shows what tone it takes as being white in the scene.
(someone correct me if i'm wrong)
Suvakas
For example A is used for regular light bulbs. The regular bulb is sooo yellow. When you use A, then the bulb color is taken as white and it will be presented as white on the image (without using A for white balance the bulb would be yellow).
So as far as I understand, then that color in Wiki shows what tone it takes as being white in the scene.
(someone correct me if i'm wrong)
Suvakas
Thanks but I still dont understand why A turns everything blue.
Is it because when A, being very low temp, tried to map that temp as white, and everything is mostly very bright already since it is a sky environment, that A then makes it all blue? (in my test scene)
If that is true then I can understand it now. Thanks again for the input.
Is it because when A, being very low temp, tried to map that temp as white, and everything is mostly very bright already since it is a sky environment, that A then makes it all blue? (in my test scene)
If that is true then I can understand it now. Thanks again for the input.

Content contained in my posts is for informational purposes only and is used at your own risk.
-
- Posts: 517
- Joined: Sun Mar 04, 2007 6:20 am
- Location: Stuttgart, Germany
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: Bing [Bot] and 3 guests