I managed it, Lightroom came to the rescue (7 day trial) 😉, selecting
auto WB was 95% successful but results were acceptable as the shoot was
a freebie for a local care facility.
On 29/07/2025 20:36, Moose wrote:
Lightroom Classic (may work in other version, I don't know):
ts
Select all images
Select Develop Tab
Make sure Auto Sync on the bottom is on
Adjust WB - from As Shot to Daylight, or with the dropper on a known
white thing
The WB will be applied to all the photos.
This will only apply to LR, unless you have it write Metadata to the
images on disk. This is not a problem for me, as I always enter
Photoshop via LR.
Except for very rare occasions, I shoot at Daylight all the time. If
unsure of the color of lighting, I shoot the WhiBal I have in my
wallet (any gray card will do). If some pix from a day's shooting are
indoors, I select those and do as above.
I don't trust Auto WB. Maybe it's reliable now, don't care. 🙂
Moose
On 7/29/2025 11:28 AM, Paul Haigney wrote:
Ok so I was asked to cover an outdoor charity event today & took
around 300+ images, I don’t constantly check the image on the camera
so only when I got home & downloaded
the images to the PC I discovered my mistake,
The last time I used the camera I set it up for indoor tungsten
lighting & didn’t reset it back to (AWB) Auto White Balance so all
images taken today have a cool blueish hue.
Is there a easy/quick way to correct this? I don’t relish doing each
individual image one by one in photoshop, I would even consider
installing a different app that’s capable of doing the corrections
in an automated manner, all suggestions appreciated.
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