04-10-2018 10:52 PM
Hello everyone,
I was looking at some pictures I took a few days ago on my computer, and some of them had purple hue.
I can't seem to find anything in common in the purple pictures only. all pictures were taken with EOS Rebel SL2, It's a new camera that is well taken care of. I am a beginner, so trouble shooting is not something I can do just yet.
PS: when I view the pictures on the camera's screen they look fine, but when I opened them on the computer they had this purple hue. not all the pictures turn purple, only some. all pictures were taken RAW.
Thank you for your help
04-11-2018 03:45 AM
04-11-2018 06:43 AM
If you use Photos 3.0, it supports 100D but not 200D.
04-11-2018 09:18 AM - edited 04-11-2018 09:18 AM
"I was looking at some pictures I took a few days ago on my computer, and some of them had purple hue"
There are three tings to try. What editing software are you using? You need to be using the free Canon DPP4. If you don't have it, you can d/l it from the Canon web site. Secondly, you need to get a new high quality SD card. Don't buy cheap off brand SD cards. Lexar, Snadisk, Transend, etc are best choices.
Lastly, and worse case it a failing sensor in the camera.
Very first thing is to try DPP4 for your Raw conversion. Do this today!
04-22-2018 10:26 AM
At some point you probably checked out 'Custom White Balance' and shot against something that was picked up. The camera has corrected the white balance for whatever you pointed at. Reset custom settings or something 😉
I could either be spot on or horribly off.
04-22-2018 10:40 AM
What shooting mode are you using on the mode dial? What is your white balance setting?
If you get the same result when you shoot in full auto, Green [A] mode, then your image sensor is shot. If not, then you White Balance is probably set to Flash. Change it to Auto.
04-22-2018 03:29 PM
@Waddizzlewrote:What shooting mode are you using on the mode dial? What is your white balance setting?
If you get the same result when you shoot in full auto, Green [A] mode, then your image sensor is shot. If not, then you White Balance is probably set to Flash. Change it to Auto.
I don't believe the example submitted by the OP can possibly be explained by an erroneous or suboptimal white balance setting.
04-22-2018 05:19 PM
"I don't believe the example ... (is caused by)... white balance setting."
Neither do I, for one thing he said, "... all pictures were taken RAW." There is not WB when shooting Raw.
04-22-2018 06:10 PM
@ebiggs1wrote:"I don't believe the example ... (is caused by)... white balance setting."
Neither do I, for one thing he said, "... all pictures were taken RAW." There is not WB when shooting Raw.
If the EXIF associated with the image says flash, guess what happens? The image gets processed with flash WB.
04-23-2018 09:45 AM
"... guess what happens?"
Too bad ignoring someone doesn't hide your posts copied and included in others folks replies. But, personal ignoring works pretty good.
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