- Joined
- Jan 16, 2006
- Messages
- 5,903
MassJester, I don't think it's overexposed, it's just that the walls are pretty stark white. The gingerbread house was what I was concerned about exposure on, though. But I think I see what you're saying, it does look almost shockingly white. I think that if the gingerbread house was outside, you'd see similar bright white areas - but the warmer color (even to the naked eye) kind of hide that.
Ideally, it should be somewhere between where it is and where the first photo was... I think I fiddled for a couple minutes, but with so many photos to process, I couldn't let myself spend too much time on it.
Carolina_Yankee, I hope you don't mind if I use one of your photos here... I thought this was a good example of the problem with GF color balance.
Notice that just under the level with the windows, the white areas immediately turn yellow. The only way to get the entire photo with "accurate" colors would be use one white balance for the top and another for the bottom.
Ideally, it should be somewhere between where it is and where the first photo was... I think I fiddled for a couple minutes, but with so many photos to process, I couldn't let myself spend too much time on it.
Carolina_Yankee, I hope you don't mind if I use one of your photos here... I thought this was a good example of the problem with GF color balance.
Notice that just under the level with the windows, the white areas immediately turn yellow. The only way to get the entire photo with "accurate" colors would be use one white balance for the top and another for the bottom.
), but I think what might be done with the image is to break out the top three levels, the tree, and the balance of the photo into three separate elements so that they can be acted upon separately. I'd try to make the colors on the tree pop a little more, and then work with WB on the other two.

