Roger Hicks
Veteran
First, 'white' isn't a reflectivity standard: it's a light standard. And there are many varieties of 'white' light, from International White Light SA (2,848K, the sensitometric standard) to International White Light SD (7,500K, overcast American daylight).
Second, we all know that a sheet of 'white' paper looks 'white' under low-wattage tungsten light (typically 2600K) or blue sky light (10,000-20,000K).
Third, very few things reflect all wavelengths equally. The most usual 'white' lab standard for high, uniform, diffuse reflectivity is (or used to be) magnesium carbonate block: not grey cards, white paper or anything else.
Fourth, how is the picture being reproduced? On a self-luminous screen? Of what sort? On paper? To be viewed under what lighting? Remember: 'white' in a picture is not the original light: it is a reconstruction of that light. The same goes for colour: it is a reconstruction, using phosphors, LEDs, dyes, inks...
Is it not possible, therefore, that those who get excessively excited about white balance are chasing a will o' the wisp, and with the wrong tools at that?
There is no such thing as a 'correct' exposure, but a 'perfect' exposure is the one that conveys exactly what you intended. Surely the same is true of white balance. It can never be 'correct', but it can be 'perfect' if it conveys exactly the effect you want.
Any thoughts?
Cheers,
R.
Second, we all know that a sheet of 'white' paper looks 'white' under low-wattage tungsten light (typically 2600K) or blue sky light (10,000-20,000K).
Third, very few things reflect all wavelengths equally. The most usual 'white' lab standard for high, uniform, diffuse reflectivity is (or used to be) magnesium carbonate block: not grey cards, white paper or anything else.
Fourth, how is the picture being reproduced? On a self-luminous screen? Of what sort? On paper? To be viewed under what lighting? Remember: 'white' in a picture is not the original light: it is a reconstruction of that light. The same goes for colour: it is a reconstruction, using phosphors, LEDs, dyes, inks...
Is it not possible, therefore, that those who get excessively excited about white balance are chasing a will o' the wisp, and with the wrong tools at that?
There is no such thing as a 'correct' exposure, but a 'perfect' exposure is the one that conveys exactly what you intended. Surely the same is true of white balance. It can never be 'correct', but it can be 'perfect' if it conveys exactly the effect you want.
Any thoughts?
Cheers,
R.
