Miha,

That's what we used to do with film, though. Using warming filters and
cooling filters if we wanted things to look like they were shot at
high noon in the sun even though they were shot at sunrise or in the
shade. Look at the 81-series and 82-series of filters. Very practical.

These days, this can be accomplished by selecting the different white
balance settings on the camera body. Very practical indeed and
eliminates the need for a huge stack of filters.

You could also just shoot raw and worry about the color balance later.
Or use the neutralize option in photoshop.

Tom

On 7/7/06, Valencic Miha <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Lars,

I know that and I use that, but sometimes, it is not practical to
"rebalance" often, because of light changing conditions (sun/shadow,
indoor, outdoor).

Malcom, thanks for the pointer, I'll check it out. Thanks.

Miha

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