From the course: Photography Foundations: Night and Low Light
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Working with color temperature and white balance
From the course: Photography Foundations: Night and Low Light
Working with color temperature and white balance
Color can be tricky in low light. Your eyes, of course, lose the ability to perceive color as light levels drop. Given a long enough exposure, your camera can pick out color details that are invisible to your eye, but getting accurate color in low light requires some work. Most of the time, you'll find that your low-light images shift to having a very warm orange or reddish cast. This is because the camera is not accurately white balancing for the available light. White balance is the process of calibrating your camera for the type of light that you're shooting in, so that colors appear accurate. In low light, it's very difficult for your camera's auto white balance mechanism to get an accurate white balance. If correct color is important to your shot, then you'll need to take some additional white balance action. You'll need to either manually white balance or you'll need to shoot RAW so that you can alter the white balance later. If you choose to shoot RAW, I recommend using a white…
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Working with exposure parameters in low light1m 13s
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Working with image sensors in low light4m 35s
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Working with shutter speed in low light3m 3s
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Considering motion blur1m 14s
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Working with ISO in low light2m 29s
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Assessing your camera's high ISO capability4m 52s
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Working with in-camera noise reduction2m 4s
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Working with aperture in low light2m 10s
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Understanding dynamic range2m 2s
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Working with color temperature and white balance1m 11s
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Exposing to the right4m 1s
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