ok what to do with fluorecent lights every home now has them in the lights and church too so pics come out brownesh. how ya change what to correct for this?
rangersvtsplash Senior Member 634 posts Joined May 2003 More info | Oct 25, 2007 18:32 | #1 ok what to do with fluorecent lights every home now has them in the lights and church too so pics come out brownesh. how ya change what to correct for this? Canon EOS 40D + BG-E2 Zoom Lens EF-S 17-85mm 1:4-5.6 IS USM with EW-71B Hood, 50mm f1.8 II.
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AdamLewis Goldmember 4,122 posts Likes: 53 Joined Oct 2005 Location: Seattle, WA More info | Oct 25, 2007 18:35 | #2 White Balance.
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lungdoc Goldmember 2,101 posts Likes: 1 Joined May 2006 Location: St. Catharines, Ontario Canada More info | Oct 25, 2007 18:40 | #3 You need to learn to adjust white balance. This site http://www.ronbigelow.com …s/white/white_balance.htm Mark
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CurtisN Master Flasher 19,129 posts Likes: 11 Joined Apr 2005 Location: Northern Illinois, US More info | Oct 25, 2007 18:41 | #4 Photographically speaking, fluorescent lights suck. "If you're not having fun, your pictures will reflect that." - Joe McNally
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breal101 Goldmember 2,724 posts Likes: 10 Joined Aug 2006 More info | Oct 25, 2007 19:12 | #5 I've noticed a change in the lighting of ballrooms and such lately, some tend to go more yellow than green with the WB on the camera set to 5500. What Curtis suggests is exactly the way we did it with film with the exception we had a 30 or 40 magenta filter for our white balance control. One reason I love digital so much. Curtis, glad you like my quote. "Try to go out empty and let your images fill you up." Jay Maisel
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numbersix fully entitled to be jealous 8,964 posts Likes: 109 Joined May 2007 Location: SF Bay Area More info | Oct 25, 2007 20:09 | #6 Curtis N wrote in post #4191968 Photographically speaking, fluorescent lights suck. I try to overpower them with flash whenever possible. Bounce the flash and use 1/250 shutter speed to keep out the fluorescent. In large rooms I'll use a green gel on my flash to match the fluorescent color (sort of), and use the flash as fill. This will help get some consistency in the subject at least. I shoot RAW and adjust the white balance in post. Hmmm. Never thought of balancing the flash. I'll have to try that. Compact fluorescent bulbs cycle at a very high frequency so they're not so limiting, but traditional fluorescent tube cycle at 60hz (2 pulses of light per cycle). In that environment, keep your shutter speed at 1/125 or multiples thereof (1/60, 1/40, 1/30). They do? How? Why? They're still running on 60 hz. You mean there's an oscillator in the CF lamp that generates its own, higher frequency? "Be seeing you."
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CurtisN Master Flasher 19,129 posts Likes: 11 Joined Apr 2005 Location: Northern Illinois, US More info | Oct 25, 2007 21:23 | #7 number six wrote in post #4192392 They do? How? Why? They're still running on 60 hz. You mean there's an oscillator in the CF lamp that generates its own, higher frequency? I don't know an oscillator from a muffler bearing. But this aspect of the CFLs is something I have read from more than one reliable source. "If you're not having fun, your pictures will reflect that." - Joe McNally
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Dan-o Goldmember 3,539 posts Likes: 2 Joined Apr 2006 Location: So. Cal. More info | Oct 25, 2007 21:35 | #8 |
numbersix fully entitled to be jealous 8,964 posts Likes: 109 Joined May 2007 Location: SF Bay Area More info | Oct 25, 2007 23:24 | #9 Curtis N wrote in post #4192821 I don't know an oscillator from a muffler bearing. But this aspect of the CFLs is something I have read from more than one reliable source. It would be easy enough to test if you have one of those godforsaken spiral bulbs. Set your shutter at 1/400 or thereabouts, shoot a burst and see if you get variations from one shot to the next. I have lots of those. My daughter and my wife have installed them everywhere - except those places where they just won't work. (My call on that.) Report to follow - but this weekend my bride and I are going to celebrate our 38th anniversary with a drive up into some of Northern California's most beautiful country: the Trinity Alps. -js "Be seeing you."
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tonylong ...winded More info | Oct 25, 2007 23:45 | #10 Speaking of messed-up white balance -- try what I did a couple of years ago (rather don't try Tony
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john_s Senior Member 579 posts Joined Aug 2006 Location: Preston, Lancashire, UK More info | Oct 26, 2007 05:07 | #11 number six wrote in post #4192392 They do? How? Why? They're still running on 60 hz. You mean there's an oscillator in the CF lamp that generates its own, higher frequency? -js Basic fluorescent lamps "strobe" at twice the mains frequency because the mains voltage is a sine waveform. The tube isn't fussy, and will light on both the positive and negative "peaks" of the wave. Each mains cycle has both a positive and negative peak, so the light strobes at 100Hz or 120Hz depending on your local mains frequency. If Daylight is an all-powerful goddess, Flash is a Wanton
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Hermeto Cream of the Crop 6,674 posts Likes: 2 Joined Oct 2005 Location: Toronto, Canada More info | Oct 26, 2007 05:25 | #12 Permanent banjohn_s wrote in post #4194289 Basic fluorescent lamps "strobe" at twice the mains frequency because the mains voltage is a sine waveform. The tube isn't fussy, and will light on both the positive and negative "peaks" of the wave. Each mains cycle has both a positive and negative peak, so the light strobes at 100Hz or 120Hz depending on your local mains frequency. (As an aside, I believe it's considered good practice in machine shops to alternate the lights across the three phase supplies to minimise strobing, which could make an operating piece of equipment appear stationary). Higher grade (pronounced "more expensive") fluorescents do generate their own (higher) frequency to produce a more "consistent" light. Incandescent light will also ‘light’ stronger twice per cycle. What we see depends mainly on what we look for.
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Oct 26, 2007 07:34 | #13 rangersvtsplash, Sony A6400, A6500, Apeman A80, & a bunch of Lenses.............
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Jon Cream of the Crop 69,628 posts Likes: 227 Joined Jun 2004 Location: Bethesda, MD USA More info | Oct 26, 2007 11:00 | #14 number six wrote in post #4192392 They do? How? Why? They're still running on 60 hz. You mean there's an oscillator in the CF lamp that generates its own, higher frequency? -js Fluorescents are a spark-discharge light, like sodium or mercury vapour lights, or strobes for that matter. Incandescents rely on a glowing filament which, by its very nature, doesn't get the "on/off/on" effect that fluorescents do - the filament doesn't cool down enough between current reversals to give you a problem Jon
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20droger Cream of the Crop 14,685 posts Likes: 27 Joined Dec 2006 More info | Oct 26, 2007 12:26 | #15 john_s wrote in post #4194289 Basic fluorescent lamps "strobe" at twice the mains frequency because the mains voltage is a sine waveform. The tube isn't fussy, and will light on both the positive and negative "peaks" of the wave. Each mains cycle has both a positive and negative peak, so the light strobes at 100Hz or 120Hz depending on your local mains frequency. (As an aside, I believe it's considered good practice in machine shops to alternate the lights across the three phase supplies to minimise strobing, which could make an operating piece of equipment appear stationary). Higher grade (pronounced "more expensive") fluorescents do generate their own (higher) frequency to produce a more "consistent" light. This is true. In the old days, we used to calibrate the speed of turntables and tape decks using this strobing effect in conjunction with striped disks and tape.
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