To create by adjusting the CT, we should know the proportion between degrees K° and the related dominances that shades of CT assign to the image. If the WB is set differently from the one of the environment we’re shooting, then we get color dominances. It follows that, besides being crucial to obtaining a photo without dominances, if intentionally changed, the WB turns into a key instrument for a creative result.

©
2009 Piero Leonardi. All rights reserved.
Besides silhouettes, transparences are also interesting features of backlightings.
A low grade of CT sheds a warm light (verging on orange), whereas a high grade of CT sheds a cooler light (verging on light blue). In other words, if I adjust my WB on 3400 °K in an environment lit up by tungsten light, then I will get a photo without dominances. If I adjust it on a higher grade, then the photo will show a dominance verging on red. If I adjust it on a lower grade, then my photo will turn out with a dominance verging on blue. The attached photo can convey the idea and the atmosphere of sunset or daybreak by simply shooting in broad daylight, adjusting the WB to a higher grade than 5500 °K. Or it can transmit the perception of evening by adjusting the WB to a lower grade.

© Piero Leonardi. All rights reserved.
Reason
and Intuition
Finally, opportunities for using light are not limited to lighting the scene. They can be key creative instruments, useful for shooting a subjective reality--our own. With a little creativity, we can transfer our own idea onto the image. Actually, we transfer it onto our own perception, what we want to communicate. It is not just a question of shooting what we have in front of us, but rather of releasing what our sensitivity is able to convey and hopes to transmit to others. We should, in fact, bear in mind that generally a snapshot shows both what we reveal and what we let the others imagine.
![]() © Piero Leonardi. All rights reserved. WB set on auto--4500 °K |
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