Originally Posted by
Daniel Browning
Another important point: if you shoot raw, your histogram is lying. It is based on the JPEG, which is often one, two, or even three stops over- or under-exposed relative to the true raw data. The reason for this is that the saturation, curves, space conversion, contrast, and especially white balance processing all affect the histogram, even though they don't affect the raw data.
Here's an example:
[url="http://forums.dpreview.com/forums/read.asp?forum=1037&message=26905476]http://forums.dpreview.com/forums/read.asp?forum=1037&message=26905476[/url]
Until manufacturers add a raw histogram feature, the only workaround is to build a custom white balance file that reverses the effect of the in-camera processing to give you a *real* histogram. Some call that a "Uni-WB". The downside is that the metadata, preview, etc. are all useless (and very green!), so you can't check an image for color tones *and* histogram at the same time.
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