What happened here?

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Name
Stuart
Edit My Images
Yes
Hello all,

This photo, and approximately 10 others, was taken with the low sun roughly to my left, probably at 9 o'clock (angle not time) or south west on a compass. It has a terrible purple/blue cast to it as well as being over exposed. I was using a Canon 300mm F4 IS with the hood extended and is fitted with a protection filter which is a clear glass filter not UV filter.

WhatsUp_Img_1874.jpg



As a contrast, this photo was taken from the same point only minutes earlier but I had the sun directly behind me...


Dunnock-IMG_1740.jpg


Any suggestions as to what is up? Could the UV from the sunlight have been reflecting inside the lens hood? I didn't see anything wrong through the viewfinder at the time so I am suspecting UV.

Any suggestions welcome.
 
:agree: definitely a WB thing - shifting position is an easy way to trick a camera into coming out with the wrong result.

Yo're also shooting into a shadow in the Robin shot so this darker area will, in wintery, cold light, appear bluer. The perils of winter shooting....
 
Just looks like a white balance issue to me. Your WB is correct for the bird in the sun, but behind the fence is in shade, and therefore much cooler visually (higher K).

Overexposure could just be your metering being thrown off by the dark background, what metering / exposure mode were you using?

I was using evaluative and capturing in RAW. AWB was selected as I shoot both JPEG and RAW.
 
Giving us exif to look at would help. Overexposure - what kind of metering were you using? #1 looks like a situations for spot or centre weighted metering.
 
Here's the EXIF Info:


Camera Manufacturer : Canon
Camera Model : Canon EOS 500D
Orientation : top-left (1)
X Resolution : 72
Y Resolution : 72
Resolution unit : Inch
Date modified : 2010:02:11 15:17:20
YCbCr Positioning : co-sited (2)
:
Exposure time : 1/500
F-Number : 5.6
Exposure program : Aperture priority (3)
ISO speed ratings : 1000
EXIF version : 02.21
Date taken : 2010:02:11 15:17:20
Date digitized : 2010:02:11 15:17:20
Components configuration : YCbCr
Shutter speed : 1/512
Aperture : F5.7
Exposure bias value : -1/3
Metering mode : Multi-segment (5)
Flash : No flash
Focal length [mm] : 420
SubSecTime : 22
SubSecTimeOriginal : 22
SubSecTimeDigitized : 22
FlashPix Version : 01.00
Colour space : sRGB
EXIF image width : 4752
EXIF image length : 3168
Interoperability offset : 8380
Focal plane X-Resolution : 792000/149
Focal plane Y-Resolution : 3168000/593
Focal plane res. unit : Inch (2)
Custom rendered : Normal process (0)
Exposure mode : Auto (0)
White balance : Auto (0)
Scene capture type : Standard (0)
:
IOP index : R98
IOP version : 0100
:
Macro : Normal
Selftimer : Off
Compression setting : Fine
Flash mode : Not fired
Drive mode : Continuous
Focus Mode : AI Servo
Image size : Large
Easy shooting : Manual
Contrast : Normal
Saturation : Unknown
Sharpness : 32767
ISO value : Auto
Metering mode : Evaluative
Focus type : Unknown
AF point : Unknown
Exposure mode : Av-priority
Lens Type : 177
Long focal : 300
Short focal : 300
Focal units / mm : 1
Max aperture : 160
Min aperture : 352
White balance : Auto
Sequence number : 0
Firmware version : Firmware Version 1.0.9
Owner name :
LensID : 300 300 177
:
Version ID : 2.2.0.0
:
Compression : 6
X Resolution : 72
Y Resolution : 72
Resolution unit : Inch
Thumbnail offset : 10316
Thumbnail length : 10413
 
:agree: Should be fixable from the RAW. I think it's the small subject / large dark background - a different metering mode would have fixed this I think - pref spot. The exposure being out is maybe showing up the WB problem more - but in winter shadows are bluer.
 
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