I own D850. The histogram looks different in my camera DSLR screen and different in the ACR, while editing; Usually throws it to the left dark site. The shadows are deep, the colours are darker. Is it incompatibility of the equipment, high mgpxls camera or..? What shall I do to avoid this?It is ruining my pics. Thx
@brightlightabove Жыл бұрын
Tony, I really find your style of teaching to be very soothing and informative. Thanks for doing what you do.
@TruBBQtv7 жыл бұрын
Tony, you make histograms so chill. You're just a chill dude editing some chill photos with some chill histograms. If there was a chill histogram you'd be all the way to the right. Keep up the chill work, man.
@johnhmaw7 жыл бұрын
Much good information. Where the RGB histogram has advantages over the luminance histogram is where there is a disproportionate amount of one colour. Imagine taking a close-up shot of an orange flower, surrounded by dark green leaves (don't sound like a very exciting shot, but plenty of people take images like that). If you expose to the right using the luminance histogram you may well find that the petals look rather flat and lack contour. Look at the RGB histogram and you will probably see that the red channel is blown and the exposure needs to be reduced to avoid this. Small point but can save your bacon in some circumstances. Otherwise, nicely put.
@peterbucek21367 жыл бұрын
Nicely explained Tony! Keep making great content!
@facre99997 жыл бұрын
Peter Bucek фиффффффффффффффффффиффффффффффффффффффффффффффф
@terpy-j7x7 жыл бұрын
Like your proflile pic; I'd guess that's a recent eclipse photo?
@peterbucek21367 жыл бұрын
Mac Battle Indeed, took it with my telescope last year.
@la5150hi-lophoto6 жыл бұрын
There are professionals who don't know how to explain the technicalities of photography but you are not one of them. I can't thank you enough for excellent and informative tutorials. I wish you did underwater photography so I could learn more about that area.
@brandonferguson39347 жыл бұрын
Excellent explanation Tony! Love your content, though I am curious about why you would want to expose to the right- I always thought it was best practice to expose to the left in order to be able to recover highs later in post.
@TonyAndChelsea7 жыл бұрын
Check out kzbin.info/www/bejne/g5fZqKSZorJpfLM
@akshatkabra75397 жыл бұрын
Many don't use histogram or just ignores it these days but the benefits of it are amazing...you can correct your picture's contrast, brightness etc then and there from just seeing the histogram, and changing the camera settings. Then there is not much need to edit every photograph
@JoseSantos20047 жыл бұрын
Thanks Chelsea and Tony... following all your videos with a lot of attention and trying to repeat your tips and tricks.. Hug from Portugal
@karoncrickmore20937 жыл бұрын
Wow, I just learned so much about the histogram. Thank you so much! The information you give us is priceless and so is SDP book!
@vsizikov7 жыл бұрын
On 9:22 you probably meant 4 times more NOISE, rather than 4 times more IMAGE. :)
@RSP136 жыл бұрын
I want more image. Now.
@mihugong31534 жыл бұрын
i hate it when my image has too much image!
@mihugong31534 жыл бұрын
I hate it when my image has too much image!
@ccoquet7 жыл бұрын
As a phtpgrapher, you never stop learning. Today, i learned the importantes of the right side of the histogram. :)
@AnimatedVish7 жыл бұрын
Got the book last month and love it! Joined the group and loving it! And now thinking of buying the book for a friend on his birthday!
@Dogdocphil7 жыл бұрын
Tony... I cannot tell you how much I enjoy your videos! So much good info!
@sithralas20107 жыл бұрын
thank you, finally i got the whole histogram mystery cleared in my head. keep up the good work, greetings from germany.
@thesaint15176 жыл бұрын
Solid explanation on histogram values. Really enjoyed this video. Keep it up, Tony.
@angelobarrera417 жыл бұрын
I think some washed out image looks really good and adds a stylistic look or vintage style.
@TheSackless7 жыл бұрын
Yeah there are some instances where you just just ignore the histogram. It's just down to personal preference in the end.
@RamilVerdiyev5 жыл бұрын
How often you can find a pro teaching photography features like this on youtube? Different screen calibrations is never a problem after Tony's explanation of histogram.
@StringDeposit7 жыл бұрын
one of my most useful youtube subscriptions . thanks Tony.
@Kelvinjan7 жыл бұрын
I tried searching for a video on your channel a few weeks ago and couldn't find anything like this but now it's here! Really makes more sense now - I'll have to put it to use now, appreciate all the good content you guys put out! :)
@TonyAndChelsea7 жыл бұрын
Thanks, Kelvin!
@flatfacepete14905 жыл бұрын
6:18 that noise scared the hell out of me haha
@fridaywithkaye7 жыл бұрын
This is probably the best explanation of histograms I have come across. Thank you!
@Jollyewe5 жыл бұрын
Fantastic!! I'm a beginner & have been trying to grasp the histogram....this was very informative & easy to understand! Thanks you!
@djlive4087 жыл бұрын
Great info Tony!! I love your presentation skills as well, very well said!
@alvinblackwell2684 жыл бұрын
Thanks Tony 😊 ... this is the single most important post you've done (to me). I actually picked up skill that I never bothered with and it is awesome. I tried what you discussed and played with some images that I thought were throw aways, and fixed them; some with stunning results 🤔. Big props 👏 Alvin
@jawadsaleemastro7 жыл бұрын
Great video and information. Amazing how small knowledge gems such as this will make the understanding your camera simpler and improve our photography. Thanks Tony
@duncanwallace77607 жыл бұрын
Excellent advice as usual. One of these days I'm going to buy both your books I promise!
@richdt7 жыл бұрын
Thanks Tony, you're video explanations are always great.
@MichielCaron7 жыл бұрын
Well explained Tony! altough I sometimes prefere washing out the black tones, I think it gives a more relaxed feel to an image.
@paulinefollett30997 жыл бұрын
I enjoyed this video. It was explained in a simple easy to learn way. Thanks Tony.
@notcorrect7 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for this one! I always knew to use the histogram but I needed to really understand it before being able to use it.
@jenkins52657 жыл бұрын
These videos are amazing! So informative and really well thought-out. I love your content and the books you are selling are at such a great price point. It really shows that you're trying to make photography accessible to everyone.
@tonyugotv80107 жыл бұрын
Thank you for the videos you and Chelsea uploaded, I learned a lot from both of you.
@javedyousaf57667 жыл бұрын
I am fan of you Mr. Tony, i have learnt alot from your videos and still learning. Thanks alot for your efforts also thanks to Ms. Cheksea 😊
@TonyAndChelsea7 жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@niftytwo7 жыл бұрын
Tony & Chelsea Northrup and
@trbowlin7 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the refresher. My new D7200 offers this in the field. Very handy.
@theneonviking6417 жыл бұрын
thank you for a great and informative video. I had no knowledge of how histograms worked before watching this, and now it really makes sense. keep up the great work
@veemacks72557 жыл бұрын
Very useful. Regardless of how much I think I know about a particular element of photography, I was learn something new about it from your videos :) Although, I was waiting for the part where you talked about live histograms shown on the camera screen and how to react to what they're showing.
@pippeocastroАй бұрын
Thanks for the videos, I've seen a few and you are really talented explaining stuff
@artemverbuk84857 жыл бұрын
Guys, thank you very much! Your videos are just treasure for a newbie like me. The more I watch the more I understand I was a monkey with camera, and now finally I evolve :)
@Bloggerky7 жыл бұрын
As always, very clear and distinctly helpful. Thanks.
@erwinvandenberg60557 жыл бұрын
Hi Tony and Chelsea, Great channel and by far one of the best among the photographers! Keep up the good work! Said that, do you know if the Nikon D610 has a histogram in live view? I can't really find info about that on the net...
@IToohat7 жыл бұрын
Histograms are a dark art, but you have just enlightened me. Thank you Chelsea's assistant for exposing me to this tutorial. It's as clear as black and white now. :p
@mehappym5 жыл бұрын
Thank you , Great information. I am wondering how do you read histogram before taking picture if you doing a long exposure or a night photography ?
@aram56423 жыл бұрын
Do you have a video on how you calibrate your monitor or apply color profiles along your picture workflow?
@devanclarke-sheward38616 жыл бұрын
Great video, one question: what does it mean if the histogram has lots of smaller jagged peaks or just fewer big smooth peaks? Thanks
@FredKubami6 жыл бұрын
Hi, Tony . First congratulations for all your hard work is very helpfull. ofcourse I am your follower in all plataform. I am very new on this world of photography. My question: Using a Canon mirrorles M50 in manual mode when I read the histogram some time is overxpose or under. I use the shutter speed or aperture until I see the histogram in my camera display right. Even when is fine on the display I can see on the exposure bar maybe one stop over or under. I took the picture and looks great. My question is when the histogram is fixed it doesnt matter the exposure display bar in my camera. Sorry maybe is a silly question, but you are the master
@rwbishop7 жыл бұрын
Cool video... what does it mean when a luminance histogram is 'flat'; as in little vertical (Y axis) development across the board?
@mariacyou92657 жыл бұрын
Thank you Tony. Excellent explanation and remainder.
@leokashian88467 жыл бұрын
Tony, I have your book SDP. and watch many of you videos, but all your adjustments are made in either Lightroom or Photoshop. I have neither. But I do have Adobe "Elements 12". Can you do some videos using that?
@MegaLuigi19617 жыл бұрын
Thank you for the tip regarding noise coming from pixels on the left of the histogram.
@bertt10146 жыл бұрын
Very good introduction to histograms. Thank you!
@viktorbakai7 жыл бұрын
Tony, have you mentioned when the "hills" cropped on the top of the histogram? What does that mean?
@elizabethpaoletti83766 жыл бұрын
Hi! Your videos are awesome. Thanks so much! In Lightroom when I look at the histogram....if the triangle on the right is white, that means something is blown out. Sometimes when I bring down the highlights a bit, the white triangle disappears and I've gotten rid of the blown out area (?), but then the triangle turns to a color...like red, blue or yellow. What does this mean and is it a good or bad thing?
@Pertti4567 жыл бұрын
Would have been good to mention perhaps more clearly that a picture with just snow and sky and a white bird should have everything on the right side of the histogram. So no black point or anything even close to it. So one should not force a black point and a white point if the image has all dark/black or bright/white. If you take a picture in a mist, then everything is more or less gray, and there is no black point or white point and the picture should be washed out.
@tragicevans41574 жыл бұрын
Unless your shooting portraits indoors.
@ryanwilson59365 жыл бұрын
So it’s like an eq for audio but for an image instead? Low end is on the left, high end is on the right, and you can adjust each “pitch” to add more “black” or “white”. An image needs dynamics, just like an audio track.
@mdturnerinoz7 жыл бұрын
Thanks. Your usual in-depth excellent coverage. You did present some precise/ideas I hadn't yet dealt with. Good stuff!
@phillalonde15097 жыл бұрын
Thanks and I was aware of the histogram but didn't use it much. And yes I have been fooled by looking at the screen on my camera so let's ad this tip to my bag of tricks. On a separate note our big screen TV has KZbin built in great.... but I do not see a like button or way to add coments so I jump back to the phone... any suggestions.
@magi19697 жыл бұрын
He says that color histogram is not very useful. I think it's very useful, because the luminosity histogram is just an overage of the colors and does not tell if some color component is overexposed. It's quite common that especially sunlit faces get overexposed in the red color, sky in blue, and vegetation in green. Overexposed areas are flat and post-processing is impossible. Another issue is with the recommendation that you should shoot bright, because there's less noise in the upper part. This is true in the sense that while CCD or CMOS cells themselves are mostly linear, the signal-to-noise ratio is better in the bright end. In JPEG images, you also have less noise in the bright end, because they are flattened out in the logarithmic scale. However, logarithmic flattening and packing into 8 bits also loses much of the linear information, which is why it's better to either shoot raw or underexpose. Further, shooting in raw does not always save from the problem, because the CCD and CMOS cells have an internal _antiblooming_ feature, which makes images nonlinear in the brighter end and hence you lose information.
@YurievOlmos6 жыл бұрын
This great, great advice. You'll never want to edit your photo without Histograms again
@JeffCowan7 жыл бұрын
Tony, is that a vicuña or a guanaco?
@kaseytwo20077 жыл бұрын
thanks for clarifying histograms, great intro
@rodrigocsouza86197 жыл бұрын
Hi Tony, Hope you receive this message well, I would like to ask you about the computer that you use in your presentations, please correct if I'm wrong but, looks like that you do not use a Mac and I would like to know the computer specifications, because when you are using Photoshop and Lightroom the transition and image changes occurs very smoothly and in a very nice performance, because I'm planning to buy a new computer to use in my pós-production if you can give me these information, would help a lot. Thanks
@jaffarbh7 жыл бұрын
Unfortunately the histogram can be misleading in very specific situations because it averages out the three primary colours. I got pictures where the histogram was perfect but one colour was blown out completely. Sadly most cameras don't show "RGB" histogram in live view so you need to take the picture first and then check the levels of the primary colours. If one colour is blown out, you can underexpose a bit and retake the picture.
@XeroBritt6 жыл бұрын
Another great tutorial. Thanks!
@xkorbekx Жыл бұрын
When is the exposure meter useful when you have histogram?
@MrPodolle7 жыл бұрын
Hey, thanks for the good content. Do you happen to have a video about organizing old photos? I inherited a massive dataset of old family photos (digital and scans of old developed photographs) with duplicates and different formats and file sizes. I have a hard time to sort them since I don't know where to start. I really would appreciate if you could recommend some software or make a vid about this. Thx.
@grjlynch3 жыл бұрын
Another really useful video, thank you!
@jettysplash5 жыл бұрын
Hi Tiny and Chelsea. Do you know if Photoscape X has a similar function for using a Histogram to "correct problems" with an image? Or how to emulate using a Histogram by using its features? I am wondering if the way people learn to use a Histogram when shooting is by playing with it in an editor to figure out what it does first.
@ktg65067 жыл бұрын
Excellent explanation. Thanks so much!
@Jezz_Mcfly Жыл бұрын
Great Explanation - I didn't know anything about it - Thanks ✌
@owengee74157 жыл бұрын
can you get the luminosity histogram as opposed to colour in lightroom?
@Eivissaa7 жыл бұрын
Is there a way In Lightroom to show only the luminosity in the histogram, like Tony showed in this video in Photoshop?
@carolineandtigger7 жыл бұрын
Very nice. We learned something today. Thank you for sharing.
@chaddotlominick5 жыл бұрын
Hi, Tony. Love your videos and tutorials. I'm looking for a little more hands on training with DSLR photography and Lightroom editing. I'm in Columbia, SC. Do you have any recommendations? Thank you for any guidance you can offer.
@andrewkowach72506 жыл бұрын
I never knew how to figure that funny 'graph' chart looked like. Thank you for helping with that!
@louisduong20906 жыл бұрын
amazing video. thanks for helping me understand
@shubhmehta57907 жыл бұрын
is that a surface studio?
@keithspillett7 жыл бұрын
I use the histogram all the time if I'm shooting in bright conditions, or else take a test image and dial in any required compensation after checking it. Whichever method I use, the histogram is at the heart of it.....
@christopherconkright13172 жыл бұрын
I don’t know if you’ll answer but I was told to shoot underexposed is better then over since blown out can’t be fixed
@RoamingDeparted7 жыл бұрын
I'm so glad you made this video I've been waiting for you to do this one
@marktollefson33116 жыл бұрын
For b&w photography, does the histogram need to be used differently, especially if the lcd is set for b&w display? I only use raw files. Thanks
@binaya54986 жыл бұрын
Thank you for in-depth histogram vid.
@jantestowy1237 жыл бұрын
Understood thank you, you are great teacher!
@TonyPavone7 жыл бұрын
Hello Tony. Great video series. Learning a lot. Question. The company I work for wants me to set up the ability to make videos like yours (talking in front of camera, then switching to what's on the monitor) Not for photography though, for stock market. In any case. How are you set up?
@TonyAndChelsea7 жыл бұрын
Oh man, it's super complex. It would definitely take me a couple of hours just to diagram it all.
@giles90177 жыл бұрын
Tony & Chelsea, really enjoy all your videos there so helpful and interesting! Was just wondering how can I send in a couple of photos for you to review on one of them videos you do photos of 2016? Iv got about 3 photos that I would really love you to have a look at 2 that iv taken on my 1100D and 1 on my new 7D both using the same 50mm F1.8 and edited in Lightroom.. Keep giving us these videos all the best for 2017 from Giles in UK London
@WahidFayumzadah7 жыл бұрын
Love your video's man, easy and pleasent to follow and understandable explanations. I will be buying a book of you someday soon :D
@robertturner42253 жыл бұрын
is it okay that i always seem to prefer my photos slightly underexposed ?
@Microtonal_Cats4 жыл бұрын
Great vid. I suggest you put a one-dollar foam windscreen on the mic, will cut down sibilance.
@pandoraefretum4 жыл бұрын
top notch help... thanks got your book too
@michaelshiller77135 жыл бұрын
This was actually helpful! Thanks guys!!
@albertmaruggi89366 жыл бұрын
how are you bringing those images in to the develop module, are those DNG images?
@kirgan11 Жыл бұрын
This was helpful, but it seems like it is a guideline and not a rule for all shots. For instance, I was not able to have it "shoot to the right" on some hummingbird pictures I recently took. If I did, the white on his neck was completely blown out (even though it wasn't touching the far right) - making the picture look really bad in my opinion. If I shifted the histogram more to the left, so that there was a bigger gap between the edge of the histogram and the far right side (which you said would be underexposed) - the neck was no longer overexposed, which got all the detail back on the neck. The rest of the bird mostly looked sharp and detailed as well. Although on some of the black feathers on the edge of the wing did loose some detail. So a worse looking histogram, made the better looking picture in this case.
@Joe.Tragos2 жыл бұрын
Thank You Tony!
@anthonywstanton7 жыл бұрын
Outstanding video!
@anthonyjackson4867 жыл бұрын
I'm going to make myself use the histogram thank you for showing me the importance
@lakejindsay7 жыл бұрын
9:00 - Now there's a little gem! Thanks, Tony!
@Hugo-so4ke3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for explaining it cleary
@Molina_larry7 жыл бұрын
One quick question. So when I take a shot should over or under expose?
@AnimatedVish7 жыл бұрын
Correct me if I'm wrong, but I do believe both are extremes and the best bet is to find a perfect balance where the picture is neither over or under exposed.
@stevenburrell93666 жыл бұрын
But isn't this actually showing the JPEG view if we're looking on the back of our cameras? So would this be helpful?