Nikon D5 User Manual

Page 183

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Studio Flash Lighting

Auto white balance may not produce the desired results with large
studio flash units. Use preset white balance or set white balance to
Flash and use fine-tuning to adjust white balance.

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Color Temperature

The perceived color of a light source varies with the viewer and other
conditions. Color temperature is an objective measure of the color of a
light source, defined with reference to the temperature to which an
object would have to be heated to radiate light in the same
wavelengths. While light sources with a color temperature in the
neighborhood of 5000–5500 K appear white, light sources with a lower
color temperature, such as incandescent light bulbs, appear slightly
yellow or red. Light sources with a higher color temperature appear
tinged with blue.

Note

: All figures are approximate.

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See Also

White balance bracketing (

0 151) creates several copies of each

photograph taken, varying white balance to “bracket” the current value.

“Warmer” (redder) colors

“Cooler” (bluer) colors

3000

4000

5000

6000

8000

10000

[ K ]

q w

r

e

tyu i

o

!0 !1

q I

(sodium-vapor lamps):

2700 K

w J

(incandescent)/

I (warm-

white fluorescent.): 3000 K

e I (white fluorescent): 3700 K

r I

(cool-white fluorescent):

4200 K

t I

(day white fluorescent):

5000 K

y H (direct sunlight): 5200 K
u N (flash): 5400 K
i G (cloudy): 6000 K
o I (daylight fluorescent): 6500 K

!0 I

(high temp. mercury-vapor):

7200 K

!1 M (shade): 8000 K

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