I am thinking of shooting a few pictures of a pile of ice cubes and, since I shoot RAW, was wondering what the right color temperature is for white balance.
Don't want to melt them during PP.
I am thinking of shooting a few pictures of a pile of ice cubes and, since I shoot RAW, was wondering what the right color temperature is for white balance.
Don't want to melt them during PP.
Technical answer: it obviously depends what CT light you illuminate them with; daylight, flash, tungsten, etc., so set WB accordingly
More helpful answer: leave WB on Auto and fine tune in PP, remember to shoot a shot of the WhiBal card though, unless, being ice cubes, you just declare them white
Short Answer: "Whatever looks good"
Long Answer: If you want, you can use a gray card in the shots and just use the WB eyedropper tool in ACRto adjust, but keep in mind that having a "technically accurate" WB isn't what always looks best (eg if you shot someone by candle light - and the image was "correctly" white-balanced the warm/yellowing colouring of the candles would be completely nulled - which just wouldn't look right).
I'd tend to go for a cool WB. The eye/brain naturally looks for blue to represent coolness.
Thanks, everyone, for the technical answers. But I was just joking. Could not resist not telling you! Will not be repeated!
Here, here, Colin.
Alis, jokes are only funny when WE tell them - GOT IT!
(only kidding)
Doh!