White Balance Controls - Adobe Photoshop CS6 User Manual

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White balance controls

To adjust the white balance, identify which objects in the image you want to be neutral-colored (white or gray), and then adjust the colors to make
those objects neutral. A white or gray object in a scene takes on the color cast by the ambient light or flash used to shoot the picture. When you
use the White Balance tool
scene was shot and then adjust for scene lighting automatically.
Color temperature (in Kelvins) is used as a measure of scene lighting. Natural and incandescent light sources give off light in a predictable
distribution according to their temperature.
A digital camera records the white balance at the time of exposure as a metadata entry. The Camera Raw plug-in reads this value and makes it
the initial setting when you open the file in the Camera Raw dialog box. This setting usually yields the correct color temperature, or nearly so. You
can adjust the white balance if it is not right.
Note:
Not all color casts are a result of incorrect white balance. Use the DNG Profile Editor to correct a color cast that remains after the white
balance is adjusted. See
Adjust color rendering for your camera in Camera
The Basic tab in the Camera Raw dialog box has three controls for correcting a color cast in an image:
White Balance
Camera Raw applies the white balance setting and changes the Temperature and Tint properties in the Basic tab accordingly.
Use these controls to fine-tune the color balance.
As Shot
Uses the camera's white balance settings, if they are available.
Auto
Calculates the white balance based on the image data.
Camera raw and DNG files also have the following white balance settings: Daylight, Cloudy, Shade, Tungsten, Fluorescent, and Flash.
Note:
If Camera Raw doesn't recognize the white balance setting of a camera, choosing As Shot is the same as choosing Auto.
Temperature
Sets the white balance to a custom color temperature. Decrease Temperature to correct a photo taken with a lower color
temperature of light; the Camera Raw plug-in makes the image colors bluer to compensate for the lower color temperature (yellowish) of the
ambient light. Conversely, increase Temperature to correct a photo taken with a higher color temperature of light; the image colors become warmer
(yellowish) to compensate for the higher color temperature (bluish) of the ambient light.
Note:
The range and units for the Temperature and Tint controls are different when you are adjusting a TIFF or JPEG image. For example,
Camera Raw provides a true-temperature adjustment slider for raw files from 2,000 Kelvin to 50,000 Kelvin. For JPEG or TIFF files, Camera Raw
attempts to approximate a different color temperature or white balance. Because the original value was already used to alter the pixel data in the
file, Camera Raw does not provide the true Kelvin temperature scale. In these instances, an approximate scale of -100 to 100 is used in place of
the temperature scale.
Correcting the white balance
A. Moving the Temperature slider to the right corrects a photo taken with a higher color temperature of light B. Moving the Temperature slider to
the left corrects a photo taken with a lower color temperature of light C. Photo after color temperature adjustment
Tint
Sets the white balance to compensate for a green or magenta tint. Decrease Tint to add green to the image; increase Tint to add magenta.
To adjust the white balance quickly, select the White Balance tool and then click an area in the image that you want to be a neutral gray. The
Temperature and Tint properties adjust to make the selected color exactly neutral (if possible). If you're clicking whites, choose a highlight area
that contains significant white detail rather than a specular highlight. You can double-click theWhite Balance tool to reset White Balance to As
Shot.
to specify an object that you want white or gray, Camera Raw can determine the color of the light in which the
Raw.
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