Pixelmator Support
Photomator User Guide
Support HomepagePixelmator Pro User GuidePhotomator User GuideFAQ
  • Welcome
  • Get started
    • Interface overview
    • Photomator tools and features
    • Open or import a photo
    • Browse and manage photos
      • Photos browser
      • Files browser
    • Undo, redo, and revert changes
    • Zoom and pan a photo
    • Basic gestures
    • Document settings
    • Photomator settings
    • Sync edits with Pixelmator Pro
    • Editing HDR photos
  • Color adjustments
    • About color adjustments
    • Copying and pasting color adjustments
    • Color adjustment presets
    • White Balance
    • Hue & Saturation
    • Basic
    • Selective Clarity
    • Color Balance
    • Selective Color
    • Levels
    • Curves
    • Replace Color
    • Black & White
    • Color Monochrome
    • Sepia
    • Fade
    • Channel Mixer
    • Vignette
    • Sharpen
    • Grain
    • Apply LUTs
    • Histogram
    • Editing RAW photos
  • AI editing tools
    • Auto Enhance
    • Super Resolution
    • Denoise
    • Smart Deband
    • AI masking
    • ML Crop
    • Match Colors
  • Masking and selections
  • Repair
  • Clone
  • Crop
    • Crop, flip, and rotate photos
    • Straighten photos
    • Adjust perspective
    • Crop presets
  • Batch editing
    • Batch edit photos
    • Organize and manage batch workflows
  • Save, share, and export
    • Save, share, and export
    • Export formats
  • Watermarks and frames
  • Keyboard shortcuts
  • Master Photomator with tips
  • Manage your Photomator subscription
Powered by GitBook
On this page
  • Automatically correct the white balance of a photo
  • Manually adjust color temperature and tint
  • White balance a photo by choosing a neutral grey area

White Balance

PreviousColor adjustment presetsNextHue & Saturation

Last updated 16 days ago

Sometimes, due to specific shooting conditions (fluorescent lights, for instance), the objects in an image may turn out looking too warm, too cool, or have some unnatural tint. This can affect the overall atmosphere of the photo. The White Balance adjustment lets you adjust the temperature and tint of an image and bring back some more natural-looking, real-world colors to it.

You can adjust the white balance manually, or automatically using the machine learning-powered ML adjustment.


Automatically correct the white balance of a photo

  1. Click or tap Color Adjustments in the toolbar at the top of the screen.

  2. Click or tap ML next to the White Balance adjustment.

    After doing this, you can additionally fine-tune the adjustment.

Manually adjust color temperature and tint

  1. Click or tap Color Adjsutments and turn on White Balance.

  2. Drag the Temperature slider to the left to make the image cooler, or to the right to make it warmer.

  3. Drag the Tint slider to the left to add a green tint (or neutralize a magenta tint) or drag the slider to the right to add a magenta tint (or neutralize a green tint).

White balance a photo by choosing a neutral grey area

  1. Click or tap Color Adjustments and turn on White Balance.

  2. On iPhone and iPad, tap the name of the White Balance adjustment and tap Pick Grey Point. On Mac, click the Gray color picker.

  3. Move the eyedropper to select an area of the image that contains a neutral grey color.

See also

Auto Enhance

Levels

Hue & Saturation