Here is a photo I took yesterday on a bright sunny day:
The white balance was at auto and the camera decided the colour temperature of 5650 deg and the tint of +10, which is very close to daylight. I kept these values, tweaked the image a little (enhanced contrast using Tonal Contrast in Nik tools) and you can see the result above.
Then, I realised it looked very much like the old Windows XP desktop. I search for it on the web and found the my grass looks almost yellow in comparison to the Windows desktop. I came back to my raw file and tweaked the temperature until I matched (more or less) the colours in the Windows desktop. It turns out it required 4150 deg and the tint +21. The resulting image looks very different:
The grass is more green and the sky is more blue. I didn't have a grey card with me, but I suspect it would show a white balance close to daylight, as in the above picture. The white balance measured on clouds give the temperature of about 5000 deg and the tint of about +14 (it depends where you measure).
I'm perplexed. When I made the first version I kind of liked it. It was nice and warm. However, in the second version the grass looks much more green and, by comparison, the first version looks almost dry and burned. It wasn't. We have spring here and the grass is actually green, though not exactly the shade as in version 2.
The white balance was at auto and the camera decided the colour temperature of 5650 deg and the tint of +10, which is very close to daylight. I kept these values, tweaked the image a little (enhanced contrast using Tonal Contrast in Nik tools) and you can see the result above.
Then, I realised it looked very much like the old Windows XP desktop. I search for it on the web and found the my grass looks almost yellow in comparison to the Windows desktop. I came back to my raw file and tweaked the temperature until I matched (more or less) the colours in the Windows desktop. It turns out it required 4150 deg and the tint +21. The resulting image looks very different:
The grass is more green and the sky is more blue. I didn't have a grey card with me, but I suspect it would show a white balance close to daylight, as in the above picture. The white balance measured on clouds give the temperature of about 5000 deg and the tint of about +14 (it depends where you measure).
I'm perplexed. When I made the first version I kind of liked it. It was nice and warm. However, in the second version the grass looks much more green and, by comparison, the first version looks almost dry and burned. It wasn't. We have spring here and the grass is actually green, though not exactly the shade as in version 2.