Color Filter & White balance
- Set the correct White Balance (cloudy, sunny, florescent, etc.)
- Set the correct colors to use (normal, vivid, black and white, sepia, cyanotype, etc.)
Go to THIS website to watch a quick clip about what white balance is and how it affects your camera. Make sure you understand the different white balance settings that a camera has.
Coloring/Color filters can be used to change the tint of a photo to completely only using a set of colors you choose. Example black and white coloring will only use shades of black and white whereas vivid will make you colors look brighter and stand out more. Color filters can be either internal where you just change a setting on your camera to adjust your sensor to use specific colors or it can be external. An external filter fits on your cameras lens and changes what colors or light goes into the camera's lens.
These settings can be used incorrectly to produce very creative lighting effects and coloration effects in your photos. For example lets say there is a flower in a forest you want to take a picture of. So you turn your flash on then set you exposure compensation and flash compensation down to make your subject have the correct exposure but underexpose the background. Now set your white balance to shadow. Can you imagine what this photo would look like? The flower will be lit up like a ray of sunlight hitting it.
There are many little tricks like this you can get from playing with the white balance and color options. Try them out when taking photo and see what happens.
image sources:
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/44/LensFilter-001.jpg
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/a5/Metrostation-Sofia-University-white-balance-collage.jpg
Last modified: Thursday, July 22, 2010, 12:02 PM