very helpful post, agree in all regards including a preference for “daylight” white balance @5700k

also agree that it is a “relative” reference that can be helpful, not absolute reference, so My beamshots are never just One beam, and they always include a “known” LED for reference, such as in this case 219b 4500k, and 3000k 219c, Plus a cool white reference, in this case the very cool 6500k Optisolis.

also complete agreement as far as that goes.

In addition Im tackling the effect of altering white balance to 3000k on a 3000k source, to illustrate the concept that “white” exists at more than just one CCT. This concept is critical to understanding why the same LED, viewed during the day, can look warmer than daylight, and viewed under incandescent at night, can look cooler than incandescent.

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My motivation is to normalize the conversation regarding color and tint, where atm people use words like Pure White, True White, Creamy White, while failing to take into account the meanings of Warm White, Neutral White, and Cool White.

So we end up with people reporting that they Hate Warm White because it looks too orange (it does, but only if viewed from a vantage point of daylight white balance.)

then we have people that talk about how 3500k is the perfect CCT, for them, without filling in the details regarding the ambient color temperature, and hence the white balance of their brain, when they prefer 3500k.

Im not pretending to be an expert in any of this. My goal is to facilitate sharing information in a way that can be standardized, and shared, with visuals.

I do totally agree that it makes most sense to offer images that are white balanced to “daylight” white @ 5700k (± 300k)

thanks to everyone contributing to the conversation.

Happy 4th of July, if youre in USA