hmhm wrote:
If you shoot JPG, then the camera has reduced the original 12 bits down to 8 bits, and subsequent editing or saving that image in 16 bits would be fairly pointless.
-harry
I would beg to differ. Although I would advise someone to shoot in better-than-8-bit-JPEG mode in the first place, if you start with an 8-bit file, and edit it in an 8-bit space, you essentially have no overhead for image manipulations.
Consider that most image operations are multiplicative, that is, adjusting a level by one stop actually multiplies (or divides) the luminance values by 2, thus shifting the values one bit position to the right or left. If you have a fairly wide-range image to start with, say luminance values from 5 to 250, and do some masking operation where you are 'adding' two images together, you can quite easily blow out the hightlights or block the shadows, even before you do a final brightness or contrast adjustment on the result.
As far as the original book mentioned goes, I would be pretty suspicious of someone who purported to tell you all about how to edit images in CS, only to relagate all mention of 16-bit to a small chapter at the back of the book. Smells to me like a lazy book author (or a greedy publisher) that took a PS 7 book, and tweaked it a little for the CS release, and rushed it to market. I'd pass on that book, and look for something a bit more professional.