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ADOBE PHOTOSHOP ELEMENTS 9

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USING <strong>PHOTOSHOP</strong> <strong>ELEMENTS</strong> 9<br />

Camera raw files<br />

86<br />

White balance controls for camera raw<br />

A digital camera records the white balance at the time of exposure as metadata, which you can see when you open the<br />

file in the Camera Raw dialog box. This setting usually yields the correct color temperature. You can adjust it if the<br />

white balance is not quite right.<br />

The Adjust tab in the Photoshop Camera Raw dialog box includes the following three controls for correcting a color<br />

cast in your image:<br />

White Balance Sets the color balance of the image to reflect the lighting conditions under which the photo was taken.<br />

In some cases, choosing a white balance from the White Balance menu provides satisfactory results. In many cases,<br />

you may want to customize the white balance using the Temperature and Tint adjustments.<br />

Note: The Camera Raw plug-in can read the white balance settings of some cameras. Leave White Balance set to As Shot<br />

to use the camera’s white balance settings. For cameras whose white balance settings are not recognized, selecting As Shot<br />

is the same as choosing Auto: the Camera Raw plug-in reads the image data and automatically adjusts the white balance.<br />

Temperature Fine-tunes the white balance to a custom color temperature. Set the color temperature using the Kelvin<br />

color temperature scale. Move the slider to the left to correct a photo taken at a lower color temperature of light: the<br />

plug-in makes the image colors cooler (bluish) to compensate for the lower color temperature (yellowish) of the<br />

ambient light. Conversely, move the slider to the right to correct a photo taken at a higher color temperature of light:<br />

the plug-in makes the image colors warmer (yellowish) to compensate for the higher color temperature (bluish) of the<br />

ambient light.<br />

A<br />

B<br />

C<br />

Correcting the white balance<br />

A. Moving the Temperature slider to the right corrects a photo taken at a higher color temperature of light. B. Moving the Temperature slider<br />

to the left corrects a photo taken at a lower color temperature of light. C. Photo after the color temperature has been adjusted.<br />

Tint Fine-tunes the white balance to compensate for a green or magenta tint. Move the slider to the left (negative<br />

values) to add green to the photo; move it to the right (positive values) to add magenta.<br />

To adjust the white balance quickly, select the White Balance tool, and then click an area in the preview image that<br />

should be a neutral gray or white. The Temperature and Tint sliders automatically adjust to make the selected color<br />

exactly neutral (if possible). If you’re clicking whites, choose a highlight area that contains significant white detail rather<br />

than a specular highlight.<br />

Last updated 1/27/2011

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