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by ElephantsMyAnus
1554 days ago
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No it doesn't make sense. You should not be able to capture anything darker than 40, or brighter than 60 if you are limited to 40-60. (actually by the file format, not the sensor, sensors today have higher dynamic ranges than 8 bit sRGB) It should not turn 40 into 0 and 60 into 100. |
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In real life, photographs are printed on paper. The brightness of light reflecting off paper depends not only on the colour of the paper, but on the brightness of the illumination. (Likewise, photographs displayed on a computer monitor depend on the screen's brightness.)
In real life, human brightness perception depends on the brightness of the environment. An LED can look bright in the dark and dim in sunlight, and range dim to medium to bright on a cloudy day without anyone really noticing that the clouds between them and the sun are thicker or thinner.
In real life, there is no 0. There is no 100. Your comment doesn't make any sense.