Anson Fogel
Well-known member
- Joined
- Sep 14, 2008
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- 537
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- Age
- 53
- Location
- Salt Lake City
- Website
- www.camp4collective.com
White Balance is by all accounts, the critical foundation for the process of achieving the best results throughout a workflow, and begins at shooting. However, getting it right - for this grasshopper anyway - is not always easy or obvious. How do YOU do it? So many questions I have for the experts here:
I shoot a lot of mixed lighting, outdoors, on location, as well as more controlled studio lighting. I try to get a grey card in there, but often find myself unable to do so, then hunting around in RCX for a good white/grey point in the frame to balance off of, and not always getting great results.
Why does my 5D auto-white balance in camera so well most of the time, while my MX almost never auto-white-balances in camera worth a damn? Am I doing something wrong?
If you are shooting in studio under tungsten or daylight sources, do you get the right results leaving WB as tungsten or daylight, with tint neutral? I'm not talking about grading, I'm talking about getting the WB right before/as the first key step in grading.
Do you always shoot a DSC chart every time for future use? What if you simply cannot, and why do other cameras seem to get it more "right" without this?
Would love to hear how those far more experienced that I handle this critical process.
I shoot a lot of mixed lighting, outdoors, on location, as well as more controlled studio lighting. I try to get a grey card in there, but often find myself unable to do so, then hunting around in RCX for a good white/grey point in the frame to balance off of, and not always getting great results.
Why does my 5D auto-white balance in camera so well most of the time, while my MX almost never auto-white-balances in camera worth a damn? Am I doing something wrong?
If you are shooting in studio under tungsten or daylight sources, do you get the right results leaving WB as tungsten or daylight, with tint neutral? I'm not talking about grading, I'm talking about getting the WB right before/as the first key step in grading.
Do you always shoot a DSC chart every time for future use? What if you simply cannot, and why do other cameras seem to get it more "right" without this?
Would love to hear how those far more experienced that I handle this critical process.