Does anyone know if I could possibly do this (http://www.geocities.com/lasm.rm/wb1.html) but instead of using what looks to be polarized sunlight, use incandescent for my lighting, and then convert to natural white, such as piece-of-white-paper white?
I'm not sure if I'm suppose to be saying natural daylight, because that gives a blue tint, right? I don't want a blue tint.
1) I want to use incandescent lighting since I'm frugal.
2) I want to change the white balance to look as though the pictures were taken with decent bulbs.
1) I'm sick of yellow/orangish hues on white areas.
2) Naturaly daylight bulbs by phillips get expensive; and there seems to be some factory problems, because the glass melted/unseamed on a few of them. :thumbdown:
I'm not sure if I'm suppose to be saying natural daylight, because that gives a blue tint, right? I don't want a blue tint.
1) I want to use incandescent lighting since I'm frugal.
2) I want to change the white balance to look as though the pictures were taken with decent bulbs.
1) I'm sick of yellow/orangish hues on white areas.
2) Naturaly daylight bulbs by phillips get expensive; and there seems to be some factory problems, because the glass melted/unseamed on a few of them. :thumbdown: