I'm afraid if I shoot RAW that my skills may not be good enough to make the pictures great like they are on here. I know practice makes perfect but I'm a little timid about it.
edit: I don't want to lose that great shot.
cameraperson Senior Member 818 posts Joined May 2010 Location: Atlanta, GA. More info | Mar 08, 2011 22:01 | #1 I'm afraid if I shoot RAW that my skills may not be good enough to make the pictures great like they are on here. I know practice makes perfect but I'm a little timid about it. Xsi, 18-55
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krb Cream of the Crop 8,818 posts Likes: 8 Joined Jun 2008 Location: Where southern efficiency and northern charm come together More info | Mar 08, 2011 22:02 | #2 |
GtrPlyr Senior Member 480 posts Joined Oct 2007 More info | Mar 08, 2011 22:14 | #3 Permanent banThat's right...you got it backwards. Gear List: A Brownie. I call it a Brownie cuz it fell in the toilet.
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haroldwilson Member 125 posts Joined Sep 2010 More info | Mar 08, 2011 22:46 | #4 Shoot both until you are comfortable.
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MTStringer Goldmember 4,652 posts Likes: 6 Joined May 2006 Location: Channelview, Tx More info | Mar 08, 2011 22:48 | #5 Lightroom can take a lot of the worry out of shooting RAW.
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bexi20 Senior Member 568 posts Joined Dec 2009 Location: Atlanta GA More info | RAW will give you more room to correct the picture. Canon 5D Mark II
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tonylong ...winded More info | Mar 08, 2011 23:35 | #7 For those just learning and starting with Raw, the Canon Raw processing software Digital Photo Professional is a "must have" -- not just because it is free, but because it gives you a jpeg-like image preview as a "starting point" in developing your Raw photos and from there you are free to play around to learn to enhance the photos. Tony
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tzalman Fatal attraction. 13,497 posts Likes: 213 Joined Apr 2005 Location: Gesher Haziv, Israel More info | Mar 09, 2011 05:35 | #8 You really trust yourself if you shoot raw don't you? No, but I trust the camera even less. Elie / אלי
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egordon99 Cream of the Crop 10,247 posts Likes: 3 Joined Feb 2008 Location: Philly 'burbs More info | Mar 09, 2011 08:47 | #9 bexi20 wrote in post #11984962 RAW will give you more room to correct the picture. It's not just to "correct" the picture, it's PROCESSING the raw data from the bayer sensor and demosaicing it into a proper viewable image.
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Wilt Reader's Digest Condensed version of War and Peace [POTN Vol 1] More info | Mar 09, 2011 09:57 | #10 I think that one thing we all assume is that everyone with a digital camera even CARES about quality to the same degree that we (who frequent POTN) care about it. You need to give me OK to edit your image and repost! Keep POTN alive and well with member support https://photography-on-the.net/forum/donate.php
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agedbriar Goldmember 2,657 posts Likes: 399 Joined Jan 2007 Location: Slovenia More info | Mar 09, 2011 15:12 | #11 Wilt wrote in post #11987345 I think that one thing we all assume is that everyone with a digital camera even CARES about quality to the same degree that we (who frequent POTN) care about it. I went to Yosemite in January, as part of a large group of 'extended family'...close friends from college with small children enjoying the snow back 30 years ago, and now close friends with grown children who have small children of their own. Lots of picture taking, and electronic sharing via web or CD/DVD. Due to the snow conditions and the lack of using EC to compensate for the bright scene, many shots that were posted by people were underexposed and posted exactly as shot, without PP adjustment -- because the shooter simply did not care and did not have PP software to brighten the shots before posting! If you care about IQ, RAW gives more range of adjustment to correct errors, than JPG does. As a long time photo enthusiast I feel so very sad seeing how, with cameras now pocketable and included everywhere - from mobile phones to ballpoint pens - the weight has switched from image quality to image availability.
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krb Cream of the Crop 8,818 posts Likes: 8 Joined Jun 2008 Location: Where southern efficiency and northern charm come together More info | Mar 09, 2011 15:31 | #12 agedbriar wrote in post #11989321 As a long time photo enthusiast I feel so very sad seeing how, with cameras now pocketable and included everywhere - from mobile phones to ballpoint pens - the weight has switched from image quality to image availability. Does "long time" go back to the '70s and '80s? I'd say that the mix of P&S cameras vs SLR cameras was about the same then as it it today. I'd also say that a very large percentage of people back then were shooting consumer grade film and taking it to the local drug store or Fotomat to be developed and printed at 4x6" regardless of whether they were using a P&S or an SLR. -- Ken
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Mar 09, 2011 15:45 | #13 set your camera to "RAW + JPEG" and slowly transition yourself. you'll still have your JPEG, but you'll also have a RAW file to play around with, and then compare to the JPEG. Phillip - phillipwardphotography.com
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tonylong ...winded More info | Mar 09, 2011 15:57 | #14 PWard wrote in post #11989539 set your camera to "RAW + JPEG" and slowly transition yourself. you'll still have your JPEG, but you'll also have a RAW file to play around with, and then compare to the JPEG. it will eat up your memory card in terms of storing duplicate files, but then memory is cheap, and moments can be fleeting. To me the solution to Raw/jpeg clutter is simple shoot Raw only and use DPP for a quick conversion of shots that you want to share. Tony
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Wilt Reader's Digest Condensed version of War and Peace [POTN Vol 1] More info | Mar 09, 2011 16:01 | #15 krb wrote in post #11989447 Does "long time" go back to the '70s and '80s? I'd say that the mix of P&S cameras vs SLR cameras was about the same then as it it today. I'd also say that a very large percentage of people back then were shooting consumer grade film and taking it to the local drug store or Fotomat to be developed and printed at 4x6" regardless of whether they were using a P&S or an SLR. I think one significant difference between back then and now, is that the majority of errors in exposure or bad color balance with exposing color negative film were generally fixed during printing by the automated processing and printing systems and the attendants operating them. Junk went in, and came out looking reasonably good. Now there is no attempt to fix...junk goes in, and junk comes out and gets sent to friends or posted on Facebook and Twitter. You need to give me OK to edit your image and repost! Keep POTN alive and well with member support https://photography-on-the.net/forum/donate.php
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