Amateur Photographer - UK (2019-07-27)

(Antfer) #1

subscribe 0330 333 1113 I http://www.amateurphotographer.co.uk I 27 July 2019 19


AWB
3,000-7,000K

Tungsten

degrees Kelvin

White
fluorescent

Daylight

Flash
Cloudy

Shady

Candle

Sunrise/
sunset

Tungsten

Photoflood

The higher the
wattage of lightbulb,
the higher the colour
temperature

Flash

Overcast sky

Hazy sky

Clear blue sky

Presets
3,200-7,000K
1,

2,

3,

4,

5,

6,

7,

8,

9,

10,

Average
midday
sunlight

Electromagnetic spectrum

30mm 1mm 10nm 0.01nm
Visible light

700nm 600nm 500nm 400nm

Radiation
type
Wavelength
(approximate)

Radio waves Microwaves Infrared Ultraviolet X-rays Gammarays

COLOUR temperature is measured in kelvin – a measurement of
temperature most commonly used in science which starts at absolute
zero, with no minus fi gures like Celsius or Fahrenheit have. At one
end of the scale, we have orange light at 1000K, going all the way
up to blue light at 10,000K, as the diagram above illustrates.
We often refer to colour temperature and light sources from a
subjective point of view: red, orange and yellow light are referred to
as hot, while blue or green light are considered cold, but the reality
in terms of kelvin is actually the opposite.

LIGHT is a form of electromagnetic energy, and the visible spectrum
is made up of violet, blue, green, yellow and red. These colours
combine to make white light, which is typically what you’d get
outdoors around midday and from fl ash.
The colour temperature of light obviously falls within this spectrum,
and understanding how white light is made up of these constituent
colours can be useful when working with different light sources,
coloured gels, and when shooting at sunrise and sunset.

Colour temperature


and the Kelvin scale


The visible light spectrum


Raw vs JPEG
When shooting in raw it really
doesn’t matter what the white
balance is set to because you
can easily correct it during
post-processing without any
detrimental eff ect on image
quality. However, it’s still
best to have white balance
set correctly while shooting
because it makes reviewing
images on the LCD screen
more eff ective since colours
look correct.
When shooting JPEGs, on


the other hand, it’s much more
imperative to set the correct
white balance – and especially
if you tend not to edit
your images. However, the
availability of the Camera Raw
fi lter in Photoshop does mean
that you can change white
balance as easily as you would
with a raw fi le, but it remains
better to set the correct
white balance at the point of
capture because you’re not
manipulating the pixels
that make up the image.

This was taken
in the middle of the
day in white light
Sony A7R III, 16-35mm,
0.8sec at f/13, ISO 100
ILLUSTRATIONS BY MAGGIE NELSON
Free download pdf