![Quote](images/misc/quote_icon.png)
Originally Posted by
DanK
Manfred,
I assumed Steve was talking about a display of separate histograms of all of the color channels.
If I understand right, all a monochrome histogram tells you is where along the luminance scale the pixels are clustered. In your shots, as a result of the snow, you have a lot within a short range of maximum luminance, hence the stacking near the right. WB would not affect this. However, the color temp of the light source would change the histograms of the color channels.
I never use the histograms to analyze WB because the position and size of the various histograms depends on the source (the scene). however, I find it very useful to leave my camera set that way because I often find that one channel (most often, the red) is clipping when the exposure in the other channels is low enough that the monochrome histogram shows everything to be fine. I have lost detail in a number of flower shots that way.
Dan