Forgive me in what follows if you already know this stuff. Hard to keep track of who knows what.
First shoot the CC Passport straight-on in good
even lighting using each lens with exposures all at the same aperture and ISO. Try to fill the frame with the CC Passport but leave the focus very slightly blurred.
Next, using Photo Ninja, for each lens combo, create what is called a Custom Light Profile (colour correction) made from the CC Passport photo. This Custom Light Profile is automatically saved in PN's Color Correction tool so that it can be applied from a drop-down menu to subsequent photos made with the same combo. You can also create Presets containing the Custom Light together with other edits.
Once these Profiles are created you can compare the shots of the CC Passport colours as Before & After composites to see where or how the colour casts occur for a given lens.
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I wrote a
tutorial about Custom Light Profiles once and later I added a Before & After composite shot. I've attached that here to illustrate the point about comparing Before & After. I was a little fanciful and created a flower overlay in Photoshop for this.
The point I was making with my photos below is that merely white-balancing does not always fully correct colours. (This is especially evident when using full spectrum camera without internal filtration. It is not at all as evident when using normal, visible cameras.)
But for Michael's purposes, these photos illustrate a way to determine how a particular lens is affecting colour by comparing non-profiled and profiled shots for a particular lens. That is, by comparing uncorrected vs corrected colours.
This also gives you some material to directly compare two different lenses if desired.
Equipment: D600-broadband + 60/4.5 UV-Planar + Baader UVIR-Cut Filter
[Note to NG readers: the D600 internal UV/IR blocking filter was removed.]
(1), (2), (3) and (4) are the photo captions for the 4 photos which I can't match up in this forum software.
(1) BEFORE: The original photo with only in-camera white balance does not look too bad, but the yellow & purple are obviously off. The other differences are more subtle. Photo Ninja does a good job (at least in this example) of preserving the in-camera white balance preset.
Yes, Kitty Mocha contributed some cat hair to the orange patch.
(2) AFTER: The Custom Light profile created and applied. Corrected colours look better. Saturation can be further adjusted if desired.
(3) DIFFERENCE LAYER: The Before & After differences are not so easy to see when the two versions are separated. In Photoshop I made a difference layer to show where the differences occur. The difference layer was brightened slightly to make the difference locations more apparent because some of them are subtle.
(4) COMPARISON COMPOSITE: The
After flowers atop the
Before background show the PN corrected colour against the in-camera white-balanced colour. There are only the minorest of differences in the top monotone row. This means that the in-camera white balance setting made it through the converter (Photo Ninja) without major alternation. Do be aware that this may not always happen with other converters. The flower overlay illustrates that white-balance alone is not enough to fully correct colours in the broadband camera
.