You already said the answer - the white balance changed, probably you inadvertently pressed some buttons that changed it. Maybe it's on Incandescent.
Read the manual for how to change the white balance settings. Briefly, they are in the menu under Shooting Menu, not Custom Settings. Go to shooting menu then set a program A,B,C, or D. Then scroll down in the Shooting Menu until you reach white balance (it's on the second screen), select it, and set it to Auto. Then go back up to choose the other programs B,C,D and set each of them to Auto WB too.
It is also possible to change the WB setting by holding the WB button on top of the camera and rotating the rear command wheel, which might be how you inadvertently changed it.
It is a digital camera - it has been possessed by the devil!
And even worse, the cure has to be found in the camera menus!
The horror!
reddesert has it right about white balance.
Unless of course you forgot and left a tungsten to daylight colour correction filter on the lens.
Such white balance adjustments only apply to the jpeg image saved by the camera. RAW is preferable if you have time to spend in post-processing and want to get the most out of the sensor data.
What’s “colour” anyway?
I could shoot RAW or both RAW and jpeg, but figured that jpeg is fine for blog pictures. I use the highest quality settings for the jpegs.
OOC jpegs are generally fine, but if you err and choose the wrong white balance, botch exposure, or worst yet use a monochrome mode while expecting color via the prism, you'll have less recourse. Conversely, tiny jpgs are fun to use in high-speed burst modes just for gif potential.
Digital menu systems and shortcut ergonomics become second nature after a while and can be one of the major sources of vendor lock-in once you've established a preference.
I think you folks down south abbreviate it to "color".
Few comments:
- read the manual for the white balance and how to set up the shooting banks. The first part of the manual is a good overview of how to control the camera. Memorizing it would be too much work, I just use the second part as a reference when I need to change something.
- second, a DSLR like this can be infernally complex, but if you set it on some basic defaults (metering, AF, ISO, WB, sRGB, etc) it will do something that is good to great 99% of the time. So, I personally don't rely on RAW unless I know I will have time to post-process.
- "Program A is a custom program." Shooting menu banks A-D are all equally custom or not. Again, this is the Shooting Menu (camera icon at left of menu), not the Custom Settings A-D. Go into the menu, select the camera icon for Shooting Menu, go to Shooting Menu Bank, select A. It will take you back to the Shooting Menu. Then scroll down to the second page where there are settings for image size, white balance, ISO, etc. Here you can change the white balance. I don't have all of these steps memorized, I'm literally looking at a D200 (although most Nikons are pretty similar).
- There are digital cameras where you can put the camera into auto-everything dummy or scene modes where it locks out many of the controls, but the D200 doesn't have that. The WB button plus rear dial should always be able to adjust the WB as seen on the top LCD. I don't know of a way to lock that out. There might be one, but I don't see it in the manual.
You already said the answer - the white balance changed, probably you inadvertently pressed some buttons that changed it. Maybe it's on Incandescent.
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