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Question: White Balance!?!?!?!?
I know what the white balance is but can someone explain to me what each white balance is used for like where you should use them please!?Www@QuestionHome@Com


Best Answer - Chosen by Asker:
Usually your camera will have preset white balance settings!.
something like!.
A little sun icon--used for direct sunlight!.
A clould---used for overcast days!.
A building with a shadow----used for taking pictures in a shadow!.
A light bulb--Used for tungsten light or indoor picutres!.
A flourecent bulb---Used for flourescent light!.
Or just put it on Auto, shoot in raw and adjust the whitebalance later!.Www@QuestionHome@Com

Maybe you don't know what white balance is !.!.!.

The colour of light is measured in degrees Kelvin!.

The lower the number, the closer to red the light is

So in general, incandescent lighting in your home is from 2700 to 3000 degrees K, studio lights (like used on motion picture sets) are 3400 degrees K, bright sun is 5200 degrees K as are most electronic flash units and deep shade can be as cool as 9600 degrees K!.

Within the menu of your camera, there should be a white balance option which lists various known light sources as well as the choice of picking actual colour temperatures on the Kelvin scale(my camera lists temperatures from 2500 to 10,000 degrees) : Like Bright Sun, Shade, Overcast, Fluorescent (about seven choices there), incandescent and flash!.

That said, what exactly do you need to know about the white balance in your situation!?Www@QuestionHome@Com

white balance is kind of like bleach-it makes your whites whiter!. Some types of lighting make white areas look yellowish or grey, which makes sense in the real world when you're looking at something but doesn't come out too great on a photograph!.

When you use white balance it tells your camera, this yellowish color is really white, so your camera knows to balance the rest of the colors according to white instead of yellowish!.

If you have a manual or custom white balance option for setting it yourself, always go for that!. it usually asks you to take a shot of what white is in that lighting (you take a shot of a wall or a sheet of paper)!. Then that shot will set the white balance on your camera!.

Otherwise, I would just go through the list of settings and see what looks most realistic in a certain lighting condition!.

Flourecent, incandesent, and tungsten lighting as well as different types of daylight all need different white balances!. Manual options can customize that to a particular situation instead of you having to use a generic setting that works for most similar environments!.Www@QuestionHome@Com

Check out the link below about Understanding White Balance!.Www@QuestionHome@Com

im uncomfortable wit that termonology cuz im black!.Www@QuestionHome@Com