White balance for moonlight

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I assume you mean moonlight as a source, not the moon as a subject?

Either way, it's going to depend a lot on what you want your image to look like. A lot of movie and photo tend to go cool to give that "night feel". It's also going to be warmer when the moon is close to the horizon. That said, I'd start at 4200 or so and adjust in post to fit my mood.

Edit: well, Wikipedia says 4100, and Wiki never lies.
 
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RGF said:
What would the color temp be of the moon was the subject?

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I think that's even more subjective, as some people like their pics to have a white moon, some do a yellow tint, and others do blue. If you're going for white again I'd start at around 4200K. But if you're looking for a reason to shoot RAW, this is a good one.
 
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Skirball said:
RGF said:
What would the color temp be of the moon was the subject?

Thanks

I think that's even more subjective, as some people like their pics to have a white moon, some do a yellow tint, and others do blue. If you're going for white again I'd start at around 4200K. But if you're looking for a reason to shoot RAW, this is a good one.

Always (shot raw)
 
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fotoray said:
Unless I'm missing something, isn't a good starting point just daylight (5500 deg K), since moonlight is no more than just reflected sunlight?

The moon isn't a mirror, it's opaque and will absorb and reflect different frequencies based on surface conditions and mineral. The moon, at least to my eyes, is a much cooler blue than the yellow of the sun (through our atmosphere).
 
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