04-17-2018 04:27 PM
Ive scoured the web for an answer too this question, not having any luck. I have an EOS 1200D (Rebel T5).
when using an incident light meter, and even with a gray card, in indoor situations and some others i am finding the histogram does not reach 255 (Rightmost side of histogram), sometimes it even ends a full stop or two before 255... I am a little confused, because based on incident readings and gray card readings, the exposure is correct... Even though the histogram does not touch the right end, are my exposures still correct? When importing to lightroom while preserving the picture style (usually camera standard) I still find the histogram does not hit the rightmost side, and end up needing to increase the exposure by a full stop and stretch the whites out to make the photo look well exposed...
Any ideas? I can consistently reproduce this issue. And yes, sometimes the material im photographing does not contain pure white, but underexposure is indicated by not hitting 255 (or within 1/2 stop near it) on histogram, correct?
This issue is causing me to have to do heavy post processing to make the photos acceptable, adding significant noise in the photo.
04-17-2018 05:18 PM
04-17-2018 07:21 PM
04-17-2018 09:42 PM
Try the same shot with evaluative exposure and spot exposure on the face.
04-17-2018 10:45 PM
04-25-2018 10:03 AM
04-25-2018 10:29 AM
@germanduderwrote:
Okay. I have done a bit of testing, and I'm finding while using a gray card or matrix, or spot metering using zone system, there is usually a full stop left unused in the right side of histogram still. I understand not all photos have that kind of dynamic range, but my photos are mostly landscapes without sun, or side lit from sun, all i am asking now, is if leaving this gap is considered underexposure. If I bring up the whites, where the sky meets the land the sky will be white, which it never was. Same with increasing exposure by a stop. Might I add my Canon T5 is a refurbished unit
A camera sees things differently from the human eye. And ultimately what matters is what the human eye thinks it sees. I believe you're making a mistake by letting the histogram overrule your eyes. If a picture doesn't look right, the histogram may help you diagnose the cause. But if a picture looks right, trying to rectify its histogram at the expense of the picture's visual effect is the tail wagging the dog.
04-25-2018 01:02 PM
Thanks Robert. I see your point, i do print a lot of my work on a PRO 100, and i am more worried that my prints will not show adequate brightness with this gap in the histogram. You are right, even though there is this gap, the picture does look right with it. I guess i just have it stuck in my head that if the histogram is not fully used(populated with data from 0-255), than neither is the dynamic range of my camera, which seems wrong when im shooting scenes with a large dynamic range. It also seems the canon picture styles tend too boost the exposure a little bit in comparison with the adobe RAW conversion using their profile.
If only canon would implement a RAW histogram, and spot metering in my poor old T5 😞
04-25-2018 01:46 PM
A histogram is a graphical representation of the pixels exposed in your image. The left side of the graph represents the blacks or shadows. The right side represents the highlights or bright areas. The middle section is mid-tones. That is your 18% grey. How high the graph reads is the number of pixels in that particular tone.
Gaps on either end indicate you are missing information. This means your exposure can be shifted without losing detail. It does not indicate an under or over exposure per say. If you shoot Raw you will have greater leeway to make adjustments in post. It is still a good idea to get it pretty close from the get go.
04-25-2018 01:50 PM
" It also seems the canon picture styles tend too boost the exposure a little bit in comparison with the adobe RAW conversion using their profile. "
I don't quite understand what you are saying. In Raw there are no Picture Styles. P Styles are software additions to a Raw file in post when it is converted. You are shooting Raw mode?
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