Not so sure about 'most', but what I'm saying is that there are simpler and less confusing tools that can provide necessary warnings for a raw shooter. Those tools don't take as much space, too. Say, zebras from raw, a counter for clipped pixels, and a user-programmable saturation value.
that was a lot of fun tests shooting a waxy surface yellow leaf. 150mmx100mm in direct sun light. my a74 histogram and blinkies were spot on within the range of the cameras 1/3 stop accuracy. so a max exposed raw processed was no better than a normal exposed jpeg. why i like to keep things simple.
edit , id better change my camera back to compressed raw from uncompressed.
fixed that by a simple WB calibration in camera .it was a very fine adjustment. to pull the reds back. the waveform meter on my field monitor was also perfect when shooting the image.
For the camera histogram I would have thought that is common knowledge since the camera's histogram is for the jpeg processed from the raw data.
The WB setting in the camera has no effect on the raw data itself and so WB is actually set in the raw converter in post. The WB setting is applied in camera during the camera's internal conversion of the raw data to a jpeg image on the lcd screen.
Hi Jim, thanks for sharing. I think the idea behind the article is really excellent, but I think the execution is slightly less than perfect. I am assuming you wanted to make the topic accessible to those with less of a scientific/engineering mind and education, and while e.g. the rain/bucket analogy is quite excellent for that, I think you still go too fast. Your writing style is probably difficult (and not enjoyable) to parse for the average lay-person due to your habit of stating things very precisely (with difficult jargon) and exactly once.
I'll probably never get around to it, but I would love to show you some examples of how I would re-phrase things to make it a bit easier to read and understand.
Of course I might be completely mistaken, so take this criticism with a grain of salt. And please understand that I definitely appreciate your effort, and that contributions of experts like you are what made me come back to the old dpreview again and again.
but we got here thats the main thing. 😁but realistically it just doent really matter in real world shooting.
I dont see anyone else posting images test images in fear of embarrassment to there results.
we are discussing matching the colour channel histogram in camera to the raw histogram channels using Fast Raw Viewer.
Now get your camera out and have a try.