If you can use a white balance "card" to set what white is in that specific environment you happen to be in. But the camera has to have the option to be able to set custom white balance to be able to do that and then all your colors will be fine. ;-)
For the scene mode you have portrait, landscape, bleach/snow, sunset, night & fireworks. You have many other options if you scroll within that area; metering, picture size, picture quality & color effect.
@felixswifey ah, so... what's interesting though, is that most of the settings options are 'greyed out' and cannot actually be selected - perhaps because they're not supported by the hardware... do you have a samsung admire also, or some other android? thanks
@felixswifey to Landscape? only choices are landscape and portrait - it's set to defaults (auto-everything) but the red is reduced in both indoor and outdoor, daytime and nighttime, animals, vegetables and minerals. Is this the cam protecting me with some sort of red-eye reduction? anyway i will fool around with those options next time i happen upon a sunset, thanks!
If you can use a white balance "card" to set what white is in that specific environment you happen to be in. But the camera has to have the option to be able to set custom white balance to be able to do that and then all your colors will be fine. ;-)
joi1900 2 months ago
Comment removed
felixswifey 2 months ago
Yes I do & yes you can select any of those options. Just scroll & touch the mode you want. It appears hidden but its fully accessible.
felixswifey 2 months ago
For the scene mode you have portrait, landscape, bleach/snow, sunset, night & fireworks. You have many other options if you scroll within that area; metering, picture size, picture quality & color effect.
felixswifey 2 months ago
@felixswifey ah, so... what's interesting though, is that most of the settings options are 'greyed out' and cannot actually be selected - perhaps because they're not supported by the hardware... do you have a samsung admire also, or some other android? thanks
giantukulele 2 months ago
You need to go into your camera settings and change the scene mode
felixswifey 2 months ago
@felixswifey to Landscape? only choices are landscape and portrait - it's set to defaults (auto-everything) but the red is reduced in both indoor and outdoor, daytime and nighttime, animals, vegetables and minerals. Is this the cam protecting me with some sort of red-eye reduction? anyway i will fool around with those options next time i happen upon a sunset, thanks!
giantukulele 2 months ago