Originally Posted by
DanK
Sandy,
I use a pocket-sized whiBal. Accurate, small enough to stick in your pocket, and with a lanyard for hanging around your neck.
To each her or his own, but unlike Geoff, I haven't used a custom white balance in years. It takes time, and I don't find it at all helpful. Keep in mind that a WB setting, custom or otherwise, has no effect whatever on the color data included in the raw file. It's simply metadata that the software uses as a starting point, a first value for rendering the image. When I am unsure of WB, I take a shot with the whiBal in the image, making sure that the light falling on the image is comparable to that on the surface for which I want a correct WB. I then use that for an initial neutral WB, rather than relying on a custom WB. If it is not quite what I want, I modify it in post. For example, with many flower photos, I find I prefer a slightly warmer than neutral WB.
If you use Lightroom, this is particularly easy. If you have a bunch of images captured under similar lighting, you can set the WB using the image with the whiBal in it and then sync that WB to other images in the filmstrip.
Dan