blue hair
KarenHelena
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Duffy
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This may not be lens related also. Have you tried setting your white balance for shade rather than AWB?
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Yep- always shoot raw ~ thanks, nice to know possibilities about jpg endpoints though.
geez - you're right, I was on awb and since I always go for the shade for even lighting I should have preset the wb. dang! thanks for the reminder, i bet this could be a large part of the problem.
I'm no expert on flash photography (prefer to work with natural light for photos) but what I'm guessing is that the blue cast is from the color of natural daylight fighting with the color of the flash, which is probably balanced more towards incandescent lighting.
Or, IOW, your flash is balanced towards incandescents, and your camera is white balancing based on that, so the natural sunlight (which has a much cooler color temperature) is caulsing the blue streaks.
I sometimes do this effect deliberately in my video day job. Sometimes an open window works nicely as a rim or fill light, and the blue cast works well, since all the video work I do is technology focused, and the blue sometimes works out well for the composition and effect. A bit unorthodoxy, but it works in a pinch.
At least in this example it looks like you could isolate those blue tones and push them around until you're happy with them in photoshop, since it looks like those are the only things in the frame.
Canon 40d | Canon 17-40 f/4L | Tamron 28-75mm f/2.8 | Canon 50mm f/1.8 | Canon 70-200mm f/4 L
I remember reading once about shade creating a bluish color cast.
This article
... describes it about half way down the page. Overcast light and Open Shade.
I think i also read about this in a Dan Margulis book.
How our eyes automatically filter out the blue cast, whereas a camera sees it normally.