Technically, the problem is that deep blue color is so called out-of-gamut color for most cameras. Cameras (and most monitors as well) work by default in standard, but limited sRGB color space (originally designed for HDTV televisions) and typical camera/monitor pair just can not reproduce this. Also, LEDs are very bright point sources, causing dynamic range problems with cheap, and even not so cheap cameras.
How well this is handled depends on the exact camera. You can attempt to play with shooting settings - reduce color saturation, reduce contrast, adjust exposure compensation, turn on or turn off HDR. Also, you should play with scene composition, to balance how much of the light goes from LEDs themselves and how much from the external lighting. Going from wide-angle shoot to macro may help compositionally sometimes.
Looking at your picture, it seems that blue colors are rendered somewhat purplish, with some leakage into red channel. Not sure if this is a camera error, or some your postprocessing attempts. For example probing the color in the photo editor returns R=43 G=18 B=206, while R and G should be close to zero. If the camera does this, I just can suggest dumping it in the exchange for something better calibrated.
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« Last Edit: November 05, 2023, 11:56:31 PM by RRK »
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