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Posted by: tmflyfish at Fri Oct 21 16:36:02 2005 [ Email Message ] [ Show All Posts by tmflyfish ] Mark...I think I can help. With digitals, the type of lighting is important, but not quite as important as selecting the correct white balance setting on your camera for the light provided. With old SLR film cameras, you would have to use different types of filters to compensate for different types of lighting. With digital cameras the white balance setting takes care of this. Digital cameras have an auto white balance setting that most people use, but more often than not, it doesn't work very well. To get the best pictures, you want to manually set the white balance. There typically are settings for flourescent light, tungsten (incandescent), sunlight, cloudy, etc. Most interior lighting is either flourescent, which gives off a cool, bluish hue, or tungsten, which gives off a warm, yellowish hue. Setting your white balance accordingly will compensate for these "off-hues" and you will end up with a more natural looking picture. | ||
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