03-19-2024 07:06 PM
I have an event this Saturday for my photobooth. My photobooth came with an EOS rebel t7 camera and the photobooth company gave what specs (iso,speed shutter and etc) they recommended but it made my picture extremely yellow.
i tried to fiddle around and use M, 1/125, iso 200, portrait with sharpness at 2, AWB, F7.1.
this alone caused more of a red tint in my photos so i changed the white balance shift/bracket to B3, 0/+-0
i also have a strobe, it’s set at 1/2 +0.4
I’ll provide a photo to how the photo looks right now with these settings and I’ll provide a photo of my strobe
i honestly would like a clear set photo without a red/purple/blue tint. I’ve been fiddling around for the past 2 hours and can’t seem to figure it out. If you have suggestions, please list what i should change. I’ll go through every single suggestion.
03-19-2024 08:41 PM - edited 03-19-2024 08:43 PM
Playroomhouston,
Here's one option:
Before you take your shot, put your camera in Live View and hit your Q button.
Tap on your White Balance setting and choose the Kelvin temperature one. With your left and right arrow keys, you can change the temperature up or down, selecting a cooler blueish cast or a warmer reddish cast to suit your taste, prior to ever taking your shot.
Steve Thomas
03-19-2024 10:37 PM
What is the color setting set to? If you don't have enough flash power you might be getting mixed lighting. take a shot without the flash, it should come out pretty dark.
03-20-2024 08:38 AM
FWIW, took some indoor photos and they were yellow/amber. I forwarded them to a retired photographer. Problem was white balance.
03-20-2024 11:44 AM
"i tried to fiddle around and use M, 1/125, iso 200, portrait with sharpness at 2, AWB, F7.1." "I’ve been fiddling around for the past 2 hours and can’t seem to figure it out."
Too much fiddling and over thinking. First reset the T7 back to factory defaults also clear all custom settings. Who knows what may be set incorrectly now. It sounds like you have a simple snapshot situation so try P mode, AWB and a fixed ISO that works, probably 400 as a guess. At least this will give you a base to start from. Never change more than one setting at a time, never.
WB depends on the available light. All light has color and will effect film or digital cameras in different ways. Exposure will effect WB, too.
But first and foremost you must do a full reset of the T7. That is mandatory! Consult your manual if you don't know how.
03-20-2024 12:11 PM
Odd color tint/shift is almost always a white balance issue. As kvbarkley suggested, take a shot without the flash and make sure that the image is very dark or you are getting mixed lighting with the flash active causing an undesirable mix of light with different color temperatures. If so, you will need to adjust your booth location so that it has less spillage of light into it or increase your camera F stop and flash output since you can't increase shutter speed due to shutter sync requirements.
You may also have an issue that your printer isn't properly calibrated to your camera so that even when the camera is producing proper output, your printer color reproduction could be off. If so, trying to use camera white balance/color temperature to correct for a printer calibration issue will have you running in circles. I use a DNP-820 printer and I spent close to 2 hours getting everything dialed in from camera through software to printer when I purchased it several years ago.
03-20-2024 01:22 PM
Another thing that can be helpful if you don't want to go the full color chart route is a WhiBal, a white/black/grey standard so that you can check out your light at the subject.
I can't link, but here is an image:
03-20-2024 06:39 PM
According to the specs the white balance for the strobe unit is 5600K. That is what the camera should be set at after you follow kv's and Rodger's guidance on eliminating extraneous light contamination.
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