![]() Pixels with a level between 192 and 255 can be designated as overexposed. You can adjust the threshold to display a wider range of highlights with a red clipping warning. You can then adjust the tone-tweaking sliders to reduce the presence of these clipped patches and restore missing tonal detail. ![]() The Highlight/Shadow Warning enables you to see the brightest highlights as patches of red. Here we placed the cursor over an overexposed white highlight in the image, which gave us a maximum level of 255 for the Red, Green and Blue channels. If you place the cursor over part of the photo you’ll see the precise level of the sampled area. Your photo’s tones are measured in a range of levels that run between 0 for pure black and 255 for pure white. Here, we can see that the brightest pixels at the right of the graph are peaking far higher than the midtones in the middle and shadows on the left, indicating that the highlights are very overexposed. ![]() ![]() The histogram in our annotation displays a more balanced range of highlights, midtones and shadows for the edited version of the image than in the histogram of the unedited image (below). Click the Edit Image button to access extra image-editing tools, such as the Histogram window, so that you can analyse the photo’s exposure problems with more precision. ![]()
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