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- Jan 16, 2006
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- 5,903
Kevin mentioned using RAW, you can also manually set the white balance with JPG mode (and with RAW). When you're indoors and getting yellowy photos. Press the Fn button and arrow to WB (white balance, I think it's to the left) and select Tungsten. Remember the set it back to Auto when you're outside again. This can also affect night photos. So, you can do it without shooting RAW.i have the same camera and have found that a lot of the time i take pictures they come out yellow-orangeish. yours look fantastic. i love that lily shot!
nighttime shots for me with that camera are the worst for some reason. i get better pictures with my p&s (samsung).
The advantage of RAW is that you can ignore white balance when actually shooting, and fix it later in post-processing with no penalties. Here's a shot of the Contemporary from the beach at the Polynesian - I'm pretty sure that this is the white balance as it came from the camera.

Now, here's the same photo with white balance adjusted (along with a few other tweaks, mainly some fill light added in Lightroom):

I think this is a good example of why it's nice to shoot RAW as you can go back, even months later, and tweak your photos when you're more confident in your post-processing skills - of course, the problem is that they're never done post-processing, I keep learning new things and the temptation is there to go back and redo everything all over again.

Here's another example. Original white balance:

After WB adjustment:
