Mitch.Carter
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I have a couple of questions on white balance, thought I'd add to this rather than making a new thread.
So far most of my images have been taken inside and under varying un-natural lights etc.
I mostly shoot Jpeg, so for now I'm not interested in shooting raw and playing with programs to sort out lighting. At this point I want to learn to get a decent result with my camera.
Reading a book on my 50D it gives a method of getting custom white balance using a white card with a cross on it to focus. I've done that.
I've been looking around an I'm getting a bit mixed up on Grey and White cards. I see people saying they set white balance on grey cards.
My understanding has been you set white balance with a white card and use a grey card to set exposure for light metering.
Is this correct?
Theoretically, yes.You can use any neutral colour to set your white balance I believe
I do it with video all the time (on the black/grey/white side of my Xpobalance) - because it's continuous light (regardless of whether it's natural or artificial) and lets me lock the exposure, but not so much with stills using flash.You can also set exposure with either too if you now what you're doing but I'm not sure many do?


With stills you shoot until the white is as close to the right as possible without clipping. THis should also give a soike in the centre and to the left.Theoretically, yes.
Although, you'd be surprised how many white & grey sources aren't really all that neutral (our brain plays tricks on us).
I do it with video all the time (on the black/grey/white side of my Xpobalance) - because it's continuous light (regardless of whether it's natural or artificial) and lets me lock the exposure, but not so much with stills using flash.
Wow Darren, nice post. Thanks
Is WB less of an issue in RAW? because it records things as they are with no processing?
Ignore the subject I was playing with my white balance as most of my shots at the momemt are indoors. I took one shot on custom WB and the other on AWB. The custom one I took by placing a white piece of paper infront of the tiger and setting up.
Which do you think looks better and more natural, I'm undecided right now.
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I think more like this to be correct WB the fur looks more real colour and the whites look white tome on my calibrated screen I can tell you how I got it as well if you like this ,..[/IMG]
Ignore the subject I was playing with my white balance as most of my shots at the momemt are indoors. I took one shot on custom WB and the other on AWB. The custom one I took by placing a white piece of paper infront of the tiger and setting up.
Which do you think looks better and more natural, I'm undecided right now.
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Yeah please do.
BTW the top image was AWB and the bottom was custom set using a piece of white paper. Food for thought for me that so far people have preferred the AWB one.