• 7 years ago
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A photography tutorial outlining the importance of understanding color theory, and using gels to adjust the color of flash to take even more control of your lighting.\r
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The color temperature of a light source is the temperature of an ideal black-body radiator that radiates light of a color comparable to that of the light source. Color temperature is a chareristic of visible light that has important applications in lighting, photography, videography, publishing, manufuring, astrophysics, horticulture, and other fields. In price, color temperature is meaningful only for light sources that do in f correspond somewhat closely to the radiation of some black body, i.e., those on a line from reddish/orange via yellow and more or less white to blueish white; it does not make sense to speak of the color temperature of, e.g., a green or a purple light. Color temperature is conventionally expressed in kelvin, using the symbol K, a unit of measure for absolute temperature.\r
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Color temperatures over 5000 K are called cool colors (bluish white), while lower color temperatures (2700–3000 K) are called warm colors (yellowish white through red).[1] Warm in this context is an analogy to radiated heat flux of traditional incandescent lighting rather than temperature. The spectral peak of warm-coloured light is closer to infrared, and most natural warm-coloured light sources emit significant infrared radiation. The f that warm lighting in this sense ually has a cooler color temperature often leads to confusion.[2]\r
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