Tuesday 30 November 2010

Photographing the snow


I'm sure Andrew Denny has talked in the past about why the camera records snow as blue, when we see it as white. Is it because it reflects the blueness of the sky, but our brains tell us snow ought to be white, so that's how we see it?

I took the top photo yesterday morning from the bedroom window. That is the desaturated version. What actually came out of the camera is the photo below.


For an explanation you could do worse than visiting the Digital Photography School website. Peter West Carey, in an article he has only just posted, explains that it's all to do with colour temperature. Here is an extract (it gets a bit technical).

Blue snow happens when a camera fails to recognize what snow looks like in the shade. Again, different cameras will handle things differently and maybe your camera is spot on, all the time. But maybe you get blue snow. I know I have from time to time, even with quality cameras.
With a point and shoot camera, use the “Shade” white balance, if the camera has it. This setting can also be used with a DSLR. “Shade” tells the camera all the light hitting the main subject has come from indirect sources from the sun. This light is about 7500K, while noon-day daylight is around 5000K (give or take a few hundred K). If a camera is pointed to a sunny scene and then pointed at shade, it may not switch fast enough. This also happens if the scene is a mix of shade and directly lit objects.


I got a sudden urge to stop off on my cycle home after work to try to take some night-time pictures. Those which worked best were where I used a long exposure and let car headlights light the scene. This was a three second exposure, with me holding the camera steady on the bicycle saddle.

Interestingly, there appear to be no issues with colour balance. The snow looks perfectly white.


And here's Norwich Cathedral from The Forum.

2 comments:

Flingel said...

Gosh Halfie - 3 seconds! That's a very steady pair of hands you've got, particularly in the cold! I like the picture, well done.

Halfie said...

Flingel, thanks. Yes, it was cold, but windless, so not as bitter as it has been today. I set the self-timer for taking the picture two seconds after pressing the button, then pressed the button when I thought the car would be coming into shot, and held the camera onto the saddle as steadily as I could. This was the best of five attempts!