• JohnSheehyRevpanorama_fish_eye
    549 posts
    2 years ago

    Of course, many people shooting raw don't care about the raw histogram, either. They may target exposure for the OOC/default_conversion on which a JPEG histogram is based, but only shoot raw for more flexibility in making adjustments in post-processing, rather than for optimizing raw ETTR.

  • JohnSheehyRevpanorama_fish_eye
    549 posts
    2 years ago

    That depends on what you expect it to mean. I never thought of it as an absolute light meter; just a way of determining what a "stop" of exposure change does horizontally on the histogram, at different parts of the histogram, with the WB and picture style and subject matter fixed, when only varying exposure.

  • DonaldBpanorama_fish_eye
    2378 posts
    2 years ago

    Thats an awesome explaination thanks for that John, which is why we cant basically set the perfect exposure using any incamera histograms. because we have a 1/3 stop inacuracy in exposure reading as well as 1/9 margin of error in histogram design so there will always be a little or less headroom to play with.

  • DonaldBpanorama_fish_eye
    2378 posts
    2 years ago

    That might be so, but a tone curve only effects the middle of the histogram not the ends.

  • IliahBorgpanorama_fish_eye
    976 posts
    2 years ago

    Are you familiar with the S-curve? Toe, shoulder?

  • JimKassonpanorama_fish_eye
    1738 posts
    2 years ago

    That is not true at all. The sRGB tone curve is a gamma curve with a straight line segment near the origin. In many implementations, the Adobe RGB tone curve is a simple gamma 2.2 curve.

  • DonaldBpanorama_fish_eye
    2378 posts
    2 years ago

    my review histogram does not match the live histogram. I havnt done any real testing of that yet.

  • DonaldBpanorama_fish_eye
    2378 posts
    2 years ago

    it doesnt matter as the ends are still locked. same when you adjust curves in PS to gain more contrast.

  • IliahBorgpanorama_fish_eye
    976 posts
    2 years ago

    You are terribly wrong.
    On a side note, the tone curve applied to the image isn't the one applied to the horizontal scale.

  • DonaldBpanorama_fish_eye
    2378 posts
    2 years ago

    when have you ever applied a tone curve and clipped the ends of an image ?

  • DonaldBpanorama_fish_eye
    2378 posts
    2 years ago

    when have you ever clipped the ends of a histogram with colours ? because if you have you need to relearn how to take/process an image.

    Screenshot 2023-06-26 050507.jpg

    Screenshot 2023-06-26 050507.jpg

    JPG, 68.4 KB, uploaded by DonaldB 2 years ago.

  • DonaldBpanorama_fish_eye
    2378 posts
    2 years ago

    this is a good example why sony zebras are the most accurate way to expose colours bar none.

  • IliahBorgpanorama_fish_eye
    976 posts
    2 years ago

    Sometimes several times a day. Could be even several hundred.
    "a tone curve only effects the middle of the histogram not the ends" - that's wrong, clipping or not.

  • IliahBorgpanorama_fish_eye
    976 posts
    2 years ago

    You have no idea what you are talking about ~<:-)

  • DonaldBpanorama_fish_eye
    2378 posts
    2 years ago

    I can only think of 1 instance when it is the proper way to print. and thats printing a B & W image. there is no other reason.

  • DonaldBpanorama_fish_eye
    2378 posts
    2 years ago

    so you keep saying, post an image with a purpose blown out head shot 😂

  • DonaldBpanorama_fish_eye
    2378 posts
    2 years ago

    Post any image of yours lets see if you live up to your keyboard theroy perfectionism.

  • IliahBorgpanorama_fish_eye
    976 posts
    2 years ago

    Consider off-white background, and generally use your imagination.