Roy C wrote in post #9156582
I have been using the histogram in the RAW tab in DPP - is this not accurate? edit: I have just checked my settings as shown above and they are exactly the same.
The histogram on the RAW tab is not a histogram of the output RGB image. So it definitly will not be the same as either the PS histogram or the histogram on the RGB tab which are derived from the output. OTOH, it is not exactly a histogram of the RAW data either (which might have been a more likely assumption). Move the sliders on the RAW tab and you will see that two of them affect the shape and position of the histogram, Brightness and WB. The inference is that this is image data after demoasicing, gamma correction, and WB adjustment. It also seems likely that it is a Luminance histogram calculated according to the formula 59%G/30%R/11%B.
Originally Posted by
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I have discussed this anomoly here before. At the time the conclusion was that DPP and Photoshop have slightly different interpretations of what is meant to be a standard! I have read that LightRoom has similar issues. So why is a standard colourspace not standard? The color space is, but the rendering to another color space (your monitors for instance) may be slightly different. (No more then slightly though)
DPP uses a unique variety of sRGB all its own. Go into the folder C:/Programs/Canon/DPP/icc and you will find there a creature called sRGB v1.31(Canon). Some time ago I did a comparison of this profile and the standard sRGB IEC61966-2.1 with the MS Color Panel applet and found a slight difference. IIRC one of them was a bit bigger in the blue-cyan area, but I don't remember which.