>> |
ac
!!VPzQAxYPAMA
>>114197 >>114200 These people, and your friend, are wrong. You're right.
The pixels have no concept of white balance. They just know how much light they got, and whether they're an R, G, or B pixel on the Bayer grid. White balance is applied to the raw pixel data by the software in the camera or the RAW processing software on your computer. While the camera does set a flag in the RAW file for what the white balance was, it doesn't change any of the pixel data. It just puts in a little flag somewhere in the RAW file saying what temperature it thought the light was at.
So yeah, if you're shooting raw, it makes absolutely no difference what WB setting you have it set to on camera--the data in the pixels in the RAW file will be exactly the same.
(Your friend and>>114197and>>114200are right when talking about JPEG, though. But we weren't talking about JPEG)
|