Originally Posted by
DanK
Interesting images and discussion.
Leaving aside the color cast issue, I prefer the silhouettes, #1 and #3.
The discussion of color (Manfred and Greg) is a difficult issue. I raised this in a comparison of several versions of an image of mine not long ago.
Because you had the camera set at a fixed Kelvin value (shade, whatever that is on your camera), at least two of these three photos have to be "wrong" in the sense that they are not neutral. Most likely, all three are "wrong". That is, a neutral white or gray surface wouldn't appear white or gray in the image. However, it's not clear (to me anyway) that I always want a neutral rendering of images when the lighting is so far off from daylight. I have been having an argument with another night photographer about exactly that; he thinks everything should be rendered neutrally because of color constancy, that is, the fact that we perceive colors as the same under different lighting conditions. However, I'm not certain that we do perceive colors entirely constantly under extreme conditions like blue hour. I've been meaning to see if I can find any research that deals with this, but it is a complex area, and I have made very little headway so far.
For the time being, I compensate, but not always fully. Not compensating at all often leaves distorted color that seems quite unnatural, much like the oversaturated colors that are so popular in some landscape photography (or, for those of you on this side of the pond, like the Viking River Cruises ads on PBS). But IMHO, compensating fully often leaves images somewhat uninteresting and unlike how I remember the scene.