Outdoor Focus Autumn 2018 | Page 15

PEAK EXPOSURE 1 g o to r a Ronald Turnbull helps you get your head around the histogram r • w ri t P hotographer Ansel Adams (I think it was him but it could have been some other famous photographer, the Outdoor Focus editor will know*) had a principle of tones and shades. One eighth of the black- and-white image should be black, one eighth should be white. One eighth should be very dark grey, one eighth should be very pale grey. One eighth should be quite dark grey, one eighth quite pale grey. And one eighth each of pale mid-grey and dark mid-grey. Picture rights for Adams photos are pricey, so I insert one of my own taken, where else, in the Ansel Adams Wilderness. It’s the place where every image of Cathedral Peak naturally falls into the Ansel shade arrangement. Or does it? Today, the computer can do this for us digitally, by graphing how much of my pic falls into each of the shade ranges. We see that the distribution isn’t quiet as Adams would have it. I have rather too much pale-pale greys – that’ll be the lower sky. And I’m a bit lacking in the mid-pale-grey zone. In the cairn picture (right), the big spike represents the middling-pale tones of the mist and sky. The small spike at far left measures the darkest shadows, the unlit areas of rock like those directly below the cairn. The other small spike at the right is the sunlit snow. The histogram reveals, what’s not obvious to the eye, that there are no areas of pure white or even of near-white in the image. So what’s it for? In outdoor sunlight, it’s very difficult to tell from your camera screen whether you’ve got the exposure or not. In very low light, the brightness of the camera screen can, contrariwise, convince you of a nice bright image when it’s actually underexposed. A peek at the histogram tells you straight away. Just supposing you a) * It was Ansel Adams (with Fred Archer) who developed the Zone System described above. autumn 2018 | Outdoor focus 15