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This is why your snow images look blue, yellow, or green and this is how to fix them after you take the shot
Snow is one of the most challenging subjects to photograph correctly. While it appears white to the eye, cameras often interpret snowy scenes as blue, grey or overly warm – especially in winter light.
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Michael Kenna's snow photography shows how 10-hour exposures can reveal what both our eyes and sensors miss
In an era where cameras fire off 30 frames per second and computational photography happens in milliseconds, Michael Kenna still works the way he did in 1987: one frame, one night, sometimes ten hours ...
Occupation: Freelance wildlife photographer, Location: Traveling everywhere. Personality: Kind but stubborn, patient, and disciplined. Passion: Wildlife photography ...
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