Doug Kerr
Well-known member
Drew Strickland, in a new paper entitled "Busting the Top 7 White Balance, Color Balance and Grey Balance Myths", introduces an interesting concept regarding the interaction of white balance color correction technique and exposure determination.
In one section of his paper, "Myth #2: Raw is the Answer ", he gives a rationale as to why making white balance color correction during external development of the raw data is inferior to using in-camera white balance color correction. As I understand it, the rationale goes like this:
• Suppose we plan to take the raw output from the camera and do white balance color correction during external raw development.
• We have the camera's white balance control set to some arbitrary preset, or perhaps to AWB.
• We plan to set exposure based on observation of the camera tricolor histogram on a test shot, basically using the "expose the hottest channel to the right" criterion. We note that this histogram is influenced by the application, in-camera, of the "arbitrary" white balance color correction that is set.
We then load the file for the actual shot into our raw development software, and enact the desired white balance color correction. We may find that the highest of the three histogram peaks is now not at the far right. (Or is "beyond" the far right - Drew's example, however, is for the former situation.)
Thus we find that we have, in effect, "underexposed" the actual shot. While we can compensate for this by elevating the image levels in the raw development software ("pushing" the development), doing so will engender a noise penalty.
Thus, says Drew, if we were set the camera's custom white balance setting based on a measurement (with a white balance measurement diffuser or such), then the camera histogram would be a better indicator of the "headroom" (on a three-channel basis) for the proposed shot as corrected, leading to an exposure that will result in better noise performance for the color-corrected image.
I would be interested in the outlooks of those here who are more familiar with these techniques than I on the impact of the camera white balance setting on the attainment of "proper" exposure by chimping the histogram (for either a single or three-channel histogram).
As a plus, those who are interested in what "grey balance" means will find, in the paper, that it is a synonym for "gray balance".
Drew's paper can be found here:
http://www.prophotohome.com/busting-top-7-white-balance-color-balance-grey-balance-myths
Here is my discussion with Drew over the concept I mention:
http://www.prophotohome.com/forum/w...ing-top-7-white-balance-myths.html#post470737
In one section of his paper, "Myth #2: Raw is the Answer ", he gives a rationale as to why making white balance color correction during external development of the raw data is inferior to using in-camera white balance color correction. As I understand it, the rationale goes like this:
• Suppose we plan to take the raw output from the camera and do white balance color correction during external raw development.
• We have the camera's white balance control set to some arbitrary preset, or perhaps to AWB.
• We plan to set exposure based on observation of the camera tricolor histogram on a test shot, basically using the "expose the hottest channel to the right" criterion. We note that this histogram is influenced by the application, in-camera, of the "arbitrary" white balance color correction that is set.
We then load the file for the actual shot into our raw development software, and enact the desired white balance color correction. We may find that the highest of the three histogram peaks is now not at the far right. (Or is "beyond" the far right - Drew's example, however, is for the former situation.)
Thus we find that we have, in effect, "underexposed" the actual shot. While we can compensate for this by elevating the image levels in the raw development software ("pushing" the development), doing so will engender a noise penalty.
Thus, says Drew, if we were set the camera's custom white balance setting based on a measurement (with a white balance measurement diffuser or such), then the camera histogram would be a better indicator of the "headroom" (on a three-channel basis) for the proposed shot as corrected, leading to an exposure that will result in better noise performance for the color-corrected image.
I would be interested in the outlooks of those here who are more familiar with these techniques than I on the impact of the camera white balance setting on the attainment of "proper" exposure by chimping the histogram (for either a single or three-channel histogram).
As a plus, those who are interested in what "grey balance" means will find, in the paper, that it is a synonym for "gray balance".
Drew's paper can be found here:
http://www.prophotohome.com/busting-top-7-white-balance-color-balance-grey-balance-myths
Here is my discussion with Drew over the concept I mention:
http://www.prophotohome.com/forum/w...ing-top-7-white-balance-myths.html#post470737