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Cameras' auto-white-balance setting tends to have problems in situations where there's an overabundance of one color temperature. E.g., indoors lit by tungsten (where everything'll come out a bit orange unless you specifically tell it to use tungsten balance), indoors lit by fluorescents (same, but greenish), or wherever the hell you were (where everything turned blue, apparently). If you have a camera good enough to shoot RAW, you can do that and correct white balance after the fact. If you have a camera that lets you set a custom white balance, that's a reasonably good substitute if you have the time for it. Otherwise, you'll have to pick the white balance setting that corresponds the most closely to your scene.
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