The swans and the head-standing duck were taken about 15 seconds apart; I'm by no means quick enough to manage manual white balance settings that fast, and this is the first time I've managed to get the frame that full of swans in any case.
So for now it's under 'neat effect' rather than 'gnash teeth'. :)
Well, there is that; there is also that this doesn't happen often, and when it does, I find that I like the look of the water.
In this case (first time I've done this with swans) I like the feather detail; it doesn't show as well in the scaled jpeg as it does in the original, but there's an awful lot of it there, to the point where I'm likely to try to do it on purpose this winter.
4 comments:
Presumably you're using auto white balance?
Yes I am.
The swans and the head-standing duck were taken about 15 seconds apart; I'm by no means quick enough to manage manual white balance settings that fast, and this is the first time I've managed to get the frame that full of swans in any case.
So for now it's under 'neat effect' rather than 'gnash teeth'. :)
Probably just taking it off auto and leaving it on sunlight would do the trick for both.
Of course then I usually end up gnashing teeth when I forget to reset it when I move indoors.
Well, there is that; there is also that this doesn't happen often, and when it does, I find that I like the look of the water.
In this case (first time I've done this with swans) I like the feather detail; it doesn't show as well in the scaled jpeg as it does in the original, but there's an awful lot of it there, to the point where I'm likely to try to do it on purpose this winter.
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