I usually use AWB (Auto White Balance) and sometimes just adjust it on post if the result didn't feel 'right'.
Recently I read articles about how to set custom white balance using a reference card and began experimenting. Here are some of the articles I read:
- Schewe, J 2004, A Digital Workflow for Raw Processing Part Three: White Balance,<https://www.adobe.com/digitalimag/pdfs/ps_workflow_sec3.pdf>
- 18% Gray Card verses a White Balance Card, <https://www.xrite.com/service-support/18graycardversesawhitebalancecard>
One interesting thing I learned from the above articles is that apparently you're not supposed to use a gray card to do white balancing.
Here is what the Adobe whitepaper said:
And here is what the X-Rite article said:To be clear, this tool is designed to be used on light, nonspecular neutral tones, such as the second brightest patch on the ColorChecker. It is not designed to be used on a gray card sample. A gray card's tonality is too far down the luminance scale. Because of the lower tone value, there may be noise that can affect the resulting accuracy of the white balance.
Anyhoo, armed with a ColorChecker and a WhiBal card, I took a picture of a model figure and set the white balance on post. Here is the result.While you can use the 18% Gray to do a white balance it is not something that we suggest as the results are balancing to the gray not to the neutral white.
They are all so similar. I had expected that at least the AWB measurement would have been inaccurate but the results were so close. In the end, the experiment was not very interesting