Hello Folks,
Recently I was doing a photography project with another photographer which was photographing domestic rabbits of different colors against a light blue background. (Look in People and Pets, maybe I'll post a few soon)
While post processing them I got into some white balance confusion, which I don't usually run into because I don't usually do artificial lighting photography. I kept changing the white balance while shooting because I didn't get around to setting it to something white and keep it that way. ( which I should probably do next time)
So in post I have been setting each image's temp and tint to how I feel it looks good for the particular image, but then I started to think that maybe there was a more technically accurate way to do it.
Here are 3 thoughts, which is right?
1: Set each image how I like it/ feel it looks nice in PP individually, ( as I had been doing)
2: Do some experimenting ( possibly using the WB picker tool ) on the white rabbits to find an average best temp (for instance, 5400) and set all to that
3: Find out what temperature the speed lights' light was ( say it was a 6500 bulb/filter) and set all the images to that number
If you've got any thought about which of these ideas is the correct way to do it , or any other thoughts let me know, that would be really appreciated!