(I hope I spelled it right). There is a function in 20D where you can set the kelvin temperature. Was wondering if that is a substitute for custom WB or not. Or Am I way off.
Thanks.
Btw, what's the past tense of "spell" thought it was "spellt"
aam1234 Goldmember 4,132 posts Likes: 1 Joined May 2004 More info | Nov 26, 2004 09:47 | #1 (I hope I spelled it right). There is a function in 20D where you can set the kelvin temperature. Was wondering if that is a substitute for custom WB or not. Or Am I way off.
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Wildman Member 172 posts Joined Nov 2001 More info | Nov 26, 2004 10:05 | #2 Kelvin
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Nov 26, 2004 10:10 | #3 Thanks Wildman,
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Persian-Rice Goldmember 1,531 posts Likes: 14 Joined Apr 2004 Location: Behind a viewfinder. More info | Nov 26, 2004 10:41 | #4 aam1234 wrote: Thanks Wildman, So if you can measure the temperature (in Kelvin) you don't need to set the WB, you just use that temp. Is that correct. Thanks mmmhm, you can use a kelvin meter, which tend to be stupid expensive.......
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Nov 26, 2004 11:13 | #5 Persian-Rice wrote: aam1234 wrote: Thanks Wildman, So if you can measure the temperature (in Kelvin) you don't need to set the WB, you just use that temp. Is that correct. Thanks mmmhm, you can use a kelvin meter, which tend to be stupid expensive....... Fair enough. Then why there is a kelvin temp in the camera if it's so expensive and nobody will use it. I'm sure there is a use for it, somehow.
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Wildman Member 172 posts Joined Nov 2001 More info | Nov 26, 2004 11:19 | #6 Lord Kelvin's Measurement
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Nov 26, 2004 11:43 | #7 Sun, shade, incandescent, florescent, etc. represent bands or regions of Kelvin values. That's one of the reasons of the original question. I thought if incandescent is normally, say 6k, but at your location it looks a bit brighter than normal incandescent, so you would adjust to maybe 6.5K for example.
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Nov 26, 2004 12:03 | #8 Where is Jon when you need him. He can sort it out very easily, he is so knowledgeable in the technical side of things.
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Persian-Rice Goldmember 1,531 posts Likes: 14 Joined Apr 2004 Location: Behind a viewfinder. More info | Nov 26, 2004 16:39 | #9 AAM, there is a use for it, it is used for exactly what you are thinking about. A kelvin meter goes for atleast 700-800 USD...............if you own one then its great, if not, use the custom white balance.
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Nov 26, 2004 16:44 | #10 Got it PR
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Wildman Member 172 posts Joined Nov 2001 More info | Nov 26, 2004 17:04 | #11 Persian Rice didn't say not to use it... it's just more tweak than most of us need. There are artists and photographers who really want this capability, so Canon opted to include it. It's really only some lines of computer code that will make a small minority of users happy, so why not?
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Persian-Rice Goldmember 1,531 posts Likes: 14 Joined Apr 2004 Location: Behind a viewfinder. More info | Nov 26, 2004 21:28 | #12 No no no, use it if you want, I would. It's the most accurate and is exteremly usefull, it's just that it's very expensive.
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robertwgross Cream of the Crop 9,462 posts Likes: 3 Joined Nov 2002 Location: California More info | Nov 26, 2004 21:37 | #13 In my old D60 camera, I can set custom white balances, but I can't do it by any specific scale or color temperature. On some of the newer cameras, you can set the custom white balance the empirical way, or you can set it by a specific color temperature. Granted, almost nobody outside a scientific lab will have a color temperature meter, but at least you can have an assigned number on your setting. If nothing else, it is one number that you can remember. For example, "That tungsten light in my garage is 3250 degrees K."
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dhbailey Senior Member 328 posts Joined Oct 2004 Location: New Hampshire, USA More info | Nov 27, 2004 06:24 | #14 If you are shooting in the same place a lot (or with similar lighting conditions) you could create your own Kelvin test, since the camera adjusts the K setting by 100s, you could start at the low end, and shoot the 40 or so pictures, each at the next K setting higher, with the camera on a tripod, and then see which picture is most faithful to what you actually saw at the location. It will take time, but will cost a lot less than a Kelvin meter, however it will only work for that situation. David
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Jon Cream of the Crop 69,628 posts Likes: 227 Joined Jun 2004 Location: Bethesda, MD USA More info | Nov 29, 2004 12:32 | #15 aam1234 wrote: Where is Jon when you need him. He can sort it out very easily, he is so knowledgeable in the technical side of things. Nice to be appreciated! Visiting the folks for Thanksgiving. That's where. ;{)# Jon
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