All of the shots I take indoors have a {yellowish | greenish | etc.} tint. Why is that?
Possibly, the light source used to illuminate the subjects of your pictures was different from what the camera expected. All light has a particular wavelength, which is associated with a specific color and temperature (measured in degrees Kelvin). The flash on the FE-120 is balanced to the temperature of midday sunlight about 5500 degrees K. Tungsten light bulbs such as are found in common household lamps have a color temperature of about 3200 degrees K; these emit a yellowish aura. Fluorescent bulbs, often found in offices, tend to be more in the range of 4000 degrees K and generate light in the green spectrum. The human eye automatically adjusts so that, for example, the color white always looks white regardless of the light source. However, a digital cameras CCD can detect subtle variations in temperature; these gradations are most visible on a white subject. By default, the FE-120 will attempt to correctly determine what white should look like for any given light source via Auto Wh