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Digital camera: Histogram


Reading your histogram

Histograms What it is: A way of judging the exposure of an image on camera, without relying on minuscule and often inaccurate LCD screens. Where to find it: Typically, histograms can be found by changing the display mode during image playback on your digital camera, or by enabling live histograms in your digital camera settings. What it does: An image that looks perfect on the digital camera doesn’t always turn out that way. It’s frustrating to take a photograph you love when you see it on your digital camera’s LCD screen, only to get home and find the highlights are blown or the detail is lost in the shadows. Histograms are one way to get a better idea of what you are actually seeing. A histogram is a way of visually displaying the image data within a photograph. It is a graph of the pixels within your image based on brightness. Darker pictures are crowded on the left-hand side, with brighter pictures on the right. A good exposure has no brightness data that touches either of the outside boundaries of the graph on the right or left side - that indicates clipping. By looking at your histogram, you can judge whether there will be any clipped highlights or shadows. If there is, adjust your shutter speed or aperture accordingly and retake the shot. Images that are overexposed will have a histogram that has brightness data clipped on the right-hand side. Many digital cameras today are beginning to have live histograms that will indicate the exposure setting before you take the shot. This can be immensely helpful, so check to see if it is an option on your digital camera. What to watch out for: Chewing up your battery life looking at the histogram display. Otherwise, there really is no downside to using histograms.

How To Get Better Digital Photography Lighting ...

Recently I was asked by a subscriber of mine in New York State as to how he could improve his daylight digital photos to create a more even light across his digital photos. I suggested that in digital photography there were many tools such as a polariser, a Neutral Density Filter and some other fancy tools.

He said “I mean after the pictures has been taken. I really want my digital photography to turn out a lot better than what I am getting.”

What he was talking about was a digital photography method called post-editing. Post means “after” and editing…well you know what that means. And in digital photography as opposed to photography you can edit your photos so much easily than traditional film photography.

What I advised Grant was that he had a few options. He could try editing his digital photography images by increasing or decreasing the light values via the Histogram. The Histogram is probably one of your best friends in digital photography that you could ask for as far as post editing goes. In a nutshell you simply open up your digital photos in Adobe Photoshop. Then once you have done that you click on “image” up the top menu bar. Once the menu box has come up you then click on “adjust” and then “levels” and up comes the Histogram.

The Histogram will display the light values from the brightest part of your digital photo to the darkest parts. It displays this light & dark information in the form of a graph. It looks something you’d see on the stock market to measure the trends of stock over a certain period of time. You might see thin lines or a block of black shadow with peaks and troughs.

The right side of the reading of the Histogram represents the brighter colours. The left side represents the darker colours. You can pull the brightness down to create a more even light over the picture if you have several overexposed parts of your digital photo. Or alternatively if there are too many underexposed parts of your digital photo you can increase the brightness.

You can increase the brightness significantly by pulling the slider to the left. And you can do the opposite with the sliders to the right. By pulling the far left or far right slider, you’ll be increasing the contrast. By pulling the middle slider either side, you will have increased brightness or darkness but not so much contrast. You’ll see that this is an incredibly simple yet powerful post editing digital photography technique.

If you have a digital photo that is underexposed with the handy Histogram you can simply change the ‘luminance output levels’. As a result you’ll create a more evenly lit digital photo.

Happy shooting!

- re-printed with permission and not altered

Amy Renfrey

If you want to learn more about how to take your photos from average to superb, then just go to http://www.DigitalPhotographySuccess.com