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Photography Q&A
White balancing under changing interior/stage lighting?
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<blockquote data-quote="nickt" data-source="post: 494878" data-attributes="member: 4923"><p>I have no advice on the WB, but watch out for the led lighting. Depending on the led driver, they may be pulsed and can cause unexpected exposure and color problems when combined with certain shutter speeds. This can be especially true if they are dimmed. No prediction what frequency they might flicker at. I have an led kitchen light and when I dim it down, I can easily get totally screwed up pictures at 1/500 shutter speed. Most of them will catch the light totally off at that speed. At 1/200, I get more success, but still a few dark ones. I need to go down to about 1/60 to get steady results. As expected, things get better at full brightness because the 'on' cycle is longer. Various led lights in the house behave differently, so just be aware.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="nickt, post: 494878, member: 4923"] I have no advice on the WB, but watch out for the led lighting. Depending on the led driver, they may be pulsed and can cause unexpected exposure and color problems when combined with certain shutter speeds. This can be especially true if they are dimmed. No prediction what frequency they might flicker at. I have an led kitchen light and when I dim it down, I can easily get totally screwed up pictures at 1/500 shutter speed. Most of them will catch the light totally off at that speed. At 1/200, I get more success, but still a few dark ones. I need to go down to about 1/60 to get steady results. As expected, things get better at full brightness because the 'on' cycle is longer. Various led lights in the house behave differently, so just be aware. [/QUOTE]
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Photography Q&A
White balancing under changing interior/stage lighting?
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