The Red Green Blue graphs are my real data, but it's showing JPEG? I thought the raw capture was my real data. So you're saying the RGB histogram is NOT wrong just that it's not my raw data which therefore must not be real data so the JPEG must be my real data. But if my raw data is my real data and the RGB histogram is showing JPEG then it must be wrong for my real data. Sounding very confused here.
Joe
If you shoot Raw, you get Raw, and the only problem is, the rear LCD shows RGB, and cannot show Raw. Nor can our computer monitors show Raw. Our tools show RGB.
So Raw files include a small embedded JPG with the camera properties in it (WB, contrast, etc), to be shown on the rear LCD. And since Raw files are not RGB, my notion is the RGB histogram obviously comes from that JPG too.
Raw does not have gamma either, but gamma only changes the data between 0 and 255, and a quirk of exponents (anything to the power of 0 or 1 is 0 or 1) is that gamma cannot change 0 or 255 endpoints ( so no concern about gamma, it cannot induce clipping).
But WB can shift the dickens out of it, esp red and blue channels in opposite directions, and so WB can shift data to cause clipping. Raw could not care less about WB yet, but unless your JPG is ballpark WB, the histogram could be a bit different than what the final RGB produce later from Raw. Histogram shows that shifted JPG histogram.
Auto WB is fairly poor, but I use it with Raw, as a quicky way to see ballpark color on the rear LCD, to be unconcerned about clipping. It is halfway close, unimportant if it is exactly right or not.
