Is this the expected behavior of the Whites slider?
I've just discovered that the Whites slider doesn't behave the way I have always thought it behaved, and as an LR user since 2006, and a frequent user of Whites since it was introduced, I'm wondering whether it has always been this way and whether this is the intended behavior.
Here's a short timelapse video illustrating the problem. Note how the sky is suddenly darker in a few frames. Note also that the darker frames are the ones with light in the foreground (which is caused primarily by people in the foreground using red flashlights).
These were shot on a Nikon D850 using the built-in intervalometer (13 second exposure every 15 seconds), in manual mode (and manual everything) with Active D-Lighting disabled. They were then all processed identically in Lightroom Classic (using manual adjustments, no auto anything). The video was then created using the Slideshow module.
I have confirmed that they're all identical (and that Active D-Lighting is disabled) by carefully comparing the EXIF data of all 380 frames. I confirmed that they were processed identically by resetting them all, then processing them together using Auto Sync.
After some investigation, it turns out that the culprit is the Whites slider. They all have Whites +60 (and exposure +1.00). In the frames with significant light in the foreground, the Whites slider doesn't brighten the sky as much. The Exposure slider doesn't seem to be affected by the brightness of the foreground.
So my question is, is this the expected behavior of the Whites slider? I would have thought it would affect equivalent pixels equally, regardless of what's happening in another part of the frame. I tried older process versions and found the same behavior (going back to PV3 when Whites was first introduced), but I'm amazed I've never noticed this before.
For those willing to dig in, here's a Google Drive folder containing the video, two adjacent raw files, and the output of exiftool for each of those raw files:
https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/18ZJFC6o2zQ1eOkP0gIBLdS_9jwHd5KXn?usp=sharing
Thanks for any insight!
