A photography histogram is a graphical representation of an image's tonal values. It displays how pixels are distributed across brightness levels, from pure black on the far left to pure white on the far right. It is an essential tool for evaluating exposure and preventing overexposure or underexposure.
How to Read the Histogram
The horizontal axis (x-axis) represents the brightness of pixels, while the vertical axis (y-axis) represents the number of pixels at that specific brightness.
Left Side (Shadows): Represents pure blacks and dark tones. A spike here means you have dark shadows, but if the graph hits a wall on the far left, you are "crushing" the blacks and losing shadow details.
Middle (Midtones): Represents the middle grays and average light levels in your scene.
Right Side (Highlights): Represents pure whites and bright areas. If the graph hits the right-side wall, you are "clipping" or "blowing out" your highlights (e.g., turning a bright sky into a solid, unrecoverable white).
Common Histogram Shapes
Different types of scenes produce distinct histogram profiles:
High-Key Scene: A bright, airy scene (like a snowfield) will have a histogram heavily weighted toward the right.
Low-Key Scene: A dark, moody scene (like a night cityscape) will have the histogram weighted toward the left.
Balanced Scene: A scene with a good mix of light and shadows will have a bell-curve shape, ideally keeping all data contained within the boundaries.
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