>On Sat, Aug 21, 2010 at 7:00 PM, Paul Sorenson <[email protected]> >wrote: > Sam - > > If the pix with the correct white balance were taken under the same lighting > as the incorrect ones, try setting the the color temperature and tint on one > of the bad ones to the same as the good ones. That should get you started > in the ballpark. If that looks good the sync it up with the others.
I uploaded some photos to my smugmug account so you can see what it looks like for me. Here is the set of photos in Lightroom's Library Module http://samtheeagle.smugmug.com/Photography/For-Photographys-Sake/Lightroom-screenshot-of-mixed/979104290_LXNCJ-M.jpg Here is a shot of a photo where the white balance was set correctly by the camera. It is in the Develop Module. Under "basic", the color and tint sliders are set to 0. http://samtheeagle.smugmug.com/Photography/For-Photographys-Sake/Lightroom-good-white-balance/979104415_7bEu7-M.jpg Here is a shot where the white balance was wrong in the camera. Develop Module. Again, color and tint sliders are set to 0. http://samtheeagle.smugmug.com/Photography/For-Photographys-Sake/Lightroom-bad-white-balance/979104324_pvy9u-M.jpg Am I missing something or looking in the wrong place? I had some fun last night moving the sliders all over the place. My images got pretty trippy looking. Which was fun, but I was having a hell of a time trying to get them to look "normal". Here's an example of where I ended up ... http://samtheeagle.smugmug.com/Photography/For-Photographys-Sake/Charlette-Overdeveloped/979120186_LL2Az-M.jpg Thanks! --------------------------- Sam -- PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List [email protected] http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net to UNSUBSCRIBE from the PDML, please visit the link directly above and follow the directions.

