Lee Jay said:The default conversion gives you much less dynamic range than is available in the raw data. Even if both highlights and shadows are clipped in the default conversion, using -highlights and +shadows may recover several stops of DR from the ends of the histogram.
Fyi: The effect is far stronger on crop cameras (at least my 60d) vs. full frame (on my 6d). I guess for the crop cameras, Canon adds a larger "safety limit" to prevent clipped highlights when shooting raw, but expects "pros" on ff to know what they're doing?
neuroanatomist said:When you shoot RAW, the camera generates a small JPG preview image that's embedded in the RAW file container. That image is what you see during the on-camera review, and it's what's used to generate the histogram and highlight warning (blinkies). All in-camera settings are applied (color space, ALO, picture style, HTP, etc.).
The nice thing about this is that you don't waste card space with a jpeg sidecar, but can extract it from the cr2 anytime later. The thumbnail is also very handy for quick browsing/rating (except in ACR), so getting the jpeg settings right makes sense even when shooting raw.
neuroanatomist said:If you don't mind somewhat funky images for on-camera review, you can use UniWB to get a histogram that better approximates the RAW data.
The length people w/o ML have to go to to get a raw histogram approximation ...
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