User Manual
Table Of Contents
- Get SnapBridge Now!
- Package Contents
- Table of Contents
- For Your Safety
- Notices
- Introduction
- First Steps
- Connecting Using SnapBridge
- Tutorial
- Basic Photography and Playback
- Matching Settings to the Subject or Situation (Scene Mode)
- Special Effects
- P, S, A, and M Modes
- User Settings: U1 and U2 Modes
- Release Mode
- Image Recording Options
- Focus
- ISO Sensitivity
- Exposure
- White Balance
- Image Enhancement
- Flash Photography
- Remote Control Photography
- Recording and Viewing Movies
- Other Shooting Options
- More on Playback
- Menu List
- Technical Notes
136
A White Balance Fine-Tuning
If white balance has been fine-tuned, an asterisk (“E”) will be displayed
next to the white balance setting. Note that the colors on the fine-
tuning axes are relative, not absolute. For example, moving the cursor
to B (blue) when a “warm” setting such as J (Incandescent) is selected
for white balance will make photographs slightly “colder” but will not
actually make them blue.
A “Mired”
Any given change in color temperature produces a greater difference
in color at low color temperatures than it would at higher color
temperatures. For example, a change of 1000 K produces a much
greater change in color at 3000 K than at 6000 K. Mired, calculated by
multiplying the inverse of the color temperature by 10
6
, is a measure of
color temperature that takes such variation into account, and as such is
the unit used in color-temperature compensation filters. E.g.:
• 4000 K–3000 K (a difference of 1000 K)=83 mired
• 7000 K–6000 K (a difference of 1000 K)=24 mired
A See Also
For information on varying white balance to “bracket” the current
value, see “Bracketing” (0 215).