Like I said, I didn't want to start a war.. that is why I haven't posted a pic comparison yet either....
Jun 16, 2008 15:52 | #61 ![]() Like I said, I didn't want to start a war.. that is why I haven't posted a pic comparison yet either.... [highlight]40D, 30D, 300D 10-22mm 15mm 17-40mm 24-70mm 50mm 60mm 70-200 IS, 100-400 IS[/highlight]
LOG IN TO REPLY |
gcogger Goldmember 2,554 posts Likes: 1 Joined Mar 2003 Location: Southampton, UK More info | Jun 16, 2008 17:47 | #62 In2Photos wrote in post #5732769 ![]() No, I said that up to a certain point a larger JPEG will have a higher image quality. I did not make a blanket statement that ALL larger JPEGs will have a higher image quality. Is that not what I said? ![]() ![]() ![]() Of course all this assumes that we are dealing with a perfect shot captured. If I could do that every time I would likely use JPEG, simply because of the speed increase in workflow. But I prefer to have the latitude associated with RAW and the larger files that RAW file produces. ![]() Then it seems we're mostly on the same page Graeme
LOG IN TO REPLY |
In2Photos Cream of the Crop ![]() 19,813 posts Likes: 6 Joined Dec 2005 Location: Near Charlotte, NC. More info | Jun 16, 2008 17:55 | #63 gcogger wrote in post #5733455 ![]() Then it seems we're mostly on the same page ![]() I don't ALWAYS quote the larger JPEG size as eveidence that it is better. I use RAW for more valid reasons than that. But yes my first post in THIS thread was about how I could distinguish between an in-camera JPEG vs a RAW converted JPEG and that was by file size. If you read any of the other "war" threads my posts are always in regards to its "forgiveness" if you will when things don't go quite as planned. Mike, The Keeper of the Archive
LOG IN TO REPLY |
Shooting Goldmember ![]() 1,552 posts Likes: 3 Joined Jan 2008 More info | Get CS3 and you don't have to worry about WB in jpeg...just process your jpegs in the CS3 raw editor...you can process jpegs the very same way as you can raw in the same program. So now shooters should have no fear of shooting jpeg..I shot raw for 2 years and gave it up gladly. Plus, what are you going to do with in a few years in the future if your raw files you make today is no longer read by the software or supported..if you didn't convert to jpegs as backup then you are really down and out. The early Nikon raw files are no longer read or supported by todays software,like DOS documents and Windows now..unless you converted them to text files you may as well forget it..same with raw, too proprietary and no industry standard exists. Jpeg is universal and with CS3 (ahhhhh the wonders of technology)
LOG IN TO REPLY |
Zazoh Goldmember ![]() 1,129 posts Joined Mar 2008 Location: MICO - Texas More info | Jun 16, 2008 21:50 | #65 Shooting wrote in post #5733621 ![]() ... Plus, what are you going to do with in a few years in the future if your raw files you make today is no longer read by the software or supported..if you didn't convert to jpegs as backup then you are really down and out. The early Nikon raw files are no longer read or supported by todays software,like DOS documents and Windows now..unless you converted them to text files you may as well forget it..same with raw, too proprietary and no industry standard exists. Jpeg is universal and with CS3 (ahhhhh the wonders of technology) Yep, as well as someone said memory is cheap, ya, but time isn't. My JPG workflow is much faster because I don't have to do the mass conversion from RAW at the very end. A Camera - A Lens -- Gear Doesn't Matter
LOG IN TO REPLY |
René Damkot Cream of the Crop ![]() 39,856 posts Likes: 8 Joined Feb 2005 Location: enschede, netherlands More info | Jun 17, 2008 06:31 | #66 Shooting wrote in post #5733621 ![]() Get CS3 and you don't have to worry about WB in jpeg...just process your jpegs in the CS3 raw editor...you can process jpegs the very same way as you can raw in the same program. You're still editing an 8bpc file instead of 12bpc... "I think the idea of art kills creativity" - Douglas Adams
LOG IN TO REPLY |
Jun 17, 2008 08:05 | #67 Not only that, but "changing" WB on a JPEG is a destructive process. Changing the WB on a RAW file isn't, that's exactly how the camera does it as well. http://www.colorblindedphoto.com
LOG IN TO REPLY |
Shooting Goldmember ![]() 1,552 posts Likes: 3 Joined Jan 2008 More info | Yep but the camera has already processed my image the way I like it which means all that stuff you do in raw has already been done for me. You can save a jpeg up to 10 times with no showing of any artifacts or problems if you save it as 12 (the maximum) so changing the white balance and saving it does significantly no damage whatsoever. If it is destructive you cannot tell it..that is a very small price to pay for all the major pluses you get when you let your camera do what you are trying to do yourself. As far as editing the 8bpc that is fine..my camera has done all the work for me so I don't have to. Me and my clients are satisfied and as I said, save it as 12 quality, no problem.
LOG IN TO REPLY |
jonnythan Goldmember ![]() 1,003 posts Joined Dec 2007 Location: Upstate NY More info | Jun 17, 2008 19:37 | #69 Shooting, the point is that adjusting WB (and sharpness and exposure etc) in JPG is a lossy way of doing things. T2i | 18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 IS | 55-250mm f/4-5.6 IS | 50mm f/1.8 II | 430ex
LOG IN TO REPLY |
Zazoh Goldmember ![]() 1,129 posts Joined Mar 2008 Location: MICO - Texas More info | Jun 17, 2008 21:03 | #70 Shooting wrote in post #5741199 ![]() Yep but the camera has already processed my image the way I like it which means all that stuff you do in raw has already been done for me. You can save a jpeg up to 10 times with no showing of any artifacts or problems if you save it as 12 (the maximum) so changing the white balance and saving it does significantly no damage whatsoever. If it is destructive you cannot tell it..that is a very small price to pay for all the major pluses you get when you let your camera do what you are trying to do yourself. As far as editing the 8bpc that is fine..my camera has done all the work for me so I don't have to. Me and my clients are satisfied and as I said, save it as 12 quality, no problem. I'm in 100% agreement, but, we are a rare breed. In fact, I only recently gave up the RAW process. Never realized a big enough return on investment. A Camera - A Lens -- Gear Doesn't Matter
LOG IN TO REPLY |
![]() | x 1600 |
y 1600 |
Log in Not a member yet?
Register to forums
Registered members may log in to forums and access all the features: full search, image upload, follow forums, own gear list and ratings, likes, more forums, private messaging, thread follow, notifications, own gallery, all settings, view hosted photos, own reviews, see more and do more... and all is free. Don't be a stranger - register now and start posting!
|
| ||
Latest registered member is skeeeter56 868 guests, 165 members online Simultaneous users record so far is 15,144, that happened on Nov 22, 2018 |