Quote:
Originally Posted by Cutter
so where on the histogram would be skin tone approx ?
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In my opinion Mark you're making things unnecessarily complicated here. As OldBoy has already stated "
a histogram is a guide" and as you are shooting in raw format (you are aren't you?), what is displayed on the cameras LCD is only representative of the small embedded jpeg image buried within the raw file itself......it is not representative of the raw file itself. So in this respect Geoff is also correct when he points out that "
I think you can read too much into a histogram". SieSmith makes a valid point by also saying "
what do you want it to look like".
First get the white balance correct by preferably placing a neutrally grey card in front of the models face for one shot and using this as a reference for setting the white balance later. Again though, this is a guide - not gospel. Once again remember the point made above "
what do you want it too look like". Skin tones are mid tones so this is where they should appear in the histogram but, too repeat, it's only a guide. If your histogram doesn't extend too the far right then using levels you can drag the slider in to meet the end point in the histogram. Better still - use curves. Use the temperature slider (or TAT tool in ACR) to warm up the image slightly if necessary but above all you should be attempting to produce a finished image that looks right to you........there is no absolute right and wrong answer in this respect.