There has been much discussion at this site of the idea of “Expose To The Right” [ETTR], but unfortunately it is stated in terms of the “photosite histogram”, with the right end corresponding to photosites at their full well capacity, but that is not directly available. Instead, there are histograms for standard JPEG output at the selected EI, and that is always further to the right, more so as the EI setting is increased above the sensor’s saturation based speed as measured by the ISO definition of SSat (often called “base ISO speed”). It gets worse when people think that pushing that JPEG histogram to the right at elevated EI settings has the same virtues as ETTR.
I am working on a good strategy, based on what the camera’s JPEG histogram or highlight overexposure blinkies tell me. One key is that the difference between the right-hand end of the JPEG histogram and the actual “photosite histogram”, in stops, is the gap between the Exposure Index setting (“ISO setting”) on the camera and the true SSat (base ISO speed) — plus a half stop. Also, we can get that true SSat from DXOL it is what DXO wrongly calls the “true ISO” in the case where the camera is at its lowest normal EI setting.
In this post, just comments on when true ETTR is usually done: with the camera at its minimum normal EI setting. Then as a guideline, one can get the JPEg histogram at the right edge, then increase the exposure by
“EI - SSat + 1/2”.
For example, if the minimum EI setting is 100 but the SSat measure there is 70 (1/2 stop less), the JPEG histogram is one stop to the right of the photosite histogram, and so you could increase exposure one stop beyond the “JPEG Histogram To The Right” level.
Also, you can probably use the highlight blinkies to find that “Histogram To The Right” level: reduce exposure till the blinkies disappear (except maybe in specular highlights that you do not mind being blown out) than add one stop of exposure (probably meaning doubling the exposure duration).
I use the blinkies method cautiously, only adding half a stop.
Details later (at least if there is any interest) like where that half stop adjustment comes from.