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Using Luma Waveforms and Histograms for Perfect Exposure

Professional cinematographers and photographers don't rely on their eyes or their screen brightness to judge exposure—they rely on data. Iris Pro brings professional exposure monitoring tools to the iPhone.

The Histogram

The histogram is a graph showing the distribution of tonal values in your image, from pure black (left) to pure white (right).

  • Underexposed: The graph is bunched to the left. Shadow details may be lost (crushed).
  • Overexposed: The graph is bunched to the right. Highlight details may be lost (clipped).
  • Balanced: The data is spread across the middle.

Tip: For Bayer RAW photography, it's often best to "Expose to the Right" (ETTR)—pushing the histogram as far right as possible without clipping the highlights. This maximizes image data and minimizes noise.

The Luma Waveform

While a histogram shows how much of the image is at a certain brightness level, a waveform shows where those brightness levels are in the frame.

The waveform maps the image from left to right. The vertical axis represents brightness (0 to 100 IRE). This is incredibly useful for ensuring specific subjects (like a person's face) are exposed correctly, regardless of the background.

Zebra Stripes

Zebra stripes are an overlay that highlights areas of the image that are overexposed (clipping). In Iris Pro, you can set the threshold (e.g., 95%). When you see the diagonal stripes appear on the sky or a bright window, you know you need to lower your ISO or increase your shutter speed to save those highlight details.

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Using Luma Waveforms and Histograms for Perfect Exposure | Iris Pro by BytenPixels | bytenpixels