Normally I chose one of the white balance settings on my Nikon D200 but I was reading a photo printing web site and they recommend always using a custom white balance setting.
What do you guys/gals use?
Mike
Normally I chose one of the white balance settings on my Nikon D200 but I was reading a photo printing web site and they recommend always using a custom white balance setting.
What do you guys/gals use?
Mike
I always play around with the white balance. You can add warmth to a photo if need be etc. I leave everything in manual when I shoot. Playing with the settings only makes you better.
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<table width="90%" cellspacing=0 cellpadding=0 align=center><tr><td>Quote, originally posted by sgt93 »</td></tr><tr><td class="quote">I always play around with the white balance. You can add warmth to a photo if need be etc. I leave everything in manual when I shoot. Playing with the settings only makes you better. </td></tr></table>
This ^^^^^^^ I find the white balance may be the most important setting when shooting in certain situations. It can really throw off the look/feel of a shot. I almost never leave it in AWB and play around with it until it gets the look I am going for.
I take a different approach. I leave mine in auto. Once taken I import into Lightroom. Sometimes I may warm up a image but I really dont like doing things that screw with the color. I only shoot portraits anyway and I am shooting in lighting that I control. When I send them to the color lab I have them color corrected so whatever adjustments I make may be overrided by the lab. I am printing for natural skin tones and I generally dont care much what the background does as long as the subject is correct.
On the other hand, If I shot landscapes and scenics, I might be more apt to change the settings. Bottom line, it really depends on what your subject is and what you want to accomplish by making changes
"I see dead people"
I just started using the custom white balance setting with an "Expodisc".
Seems to work very well. You mount the expodisc on your lens, point toward the light source and take a shot. Then select "last photo taken" in the custom white balance menu...done. They offer two discs, one for true light and one that adds warmth.Curt