Like Chauncey, I like to shoot flowers. An element of laziness, it's certainly easier than hockey matches, birds in flight or that passing jet. All the time in the world to set up the tripod, fiddle with the camera - a couple of snaps and back to the the computer inside. Couldn't be better!
So - why have I been fighting a flower all day, I ask myself? The whites around the edge of the flower are blown out in the review image, even though the raw data is well under the sensor saturation level. I fiddled with curves a bit, increasing the slope at high levels, and then it occurred to me that those same high levels are the ones that get scrunched up with gamma correction which you often get whether you want it or not.
So then I thought what if I develop the image without gamma correction? So I did.The only way I could do that is in a raw composite image exported out of RawDigger, so the colors below are less than perfect. That matters little - because what I am about to show you is exactly how much detail can get lost in normal highlights with a standard gamma-corrected image conversion. Voila:
At left, the raw file is developed using the manufacturer's converter, Sigma Photo Pro. The white at the petal tips has next to no contrast - as is common with white flower shots taken outside. A lot of the purple detail is washed out, too. By comparison, the contrast in the image on the right shows up lots of lost detail.
Makes ya think, dunnit?!