TGrundvig wrote in post #10344215
Use the Canon software from the solutions disk. I shoot real estate and I've noticed that when I import directly in CR in CS3 and CS4, both of them desaturate the image, especially on wood.
Guess:
Two reasons: You didn't tell the Canon software to color manage / use the display profile.
DPP > Prefs > Color Management > For display > Choose your display profile
Second: DPP renders the image with the camera parameters (picture style, contrast, saturation etc.) as a default starting point. ACR / LR / Whatever else do
not. They use their own default.
TGrundvig wrote in post #10344215
I even had Adobe people walk me through the CR set up to make sure I was using the most up to date. I sent them an email of one jpeg converted in DPP and one jpeg converted in PS (with zero editing) and even the people at Adobe could nto give me an explanation as to why ACR was changing some colors.
That sounds like most likely it's the second issue, and / or the people at Adobe not knowing what they were talking about.
TGrundvig wrote in post #10344215
Interestinly enough, once I move to using LR2, I found this issue was no longer an issue....go figure.
That doesn't sound right.
Do the images in DPP and the converted images PS / LR look identical? They should.
TGrundvig wrote in post #10344215
It is very effective and I usually save a jpeg and a tiff because jpeg images lose pixel data everytime they are accessed.
Not true.
A jpg only looses detail if it's compressed. That only happens when you save and close. If you then reopen, save and close again, you compressed twice.
TGrundvig wrote in post #10344215
Therefore, I save one jpeg and tiff for my clients. I usually do not keep the RAW image more than a few months. After that, I delete them.
Well, that's a choice you have to make: If you never need the images again, you could do that...
Then again, with technology improving, it might well be that the Raw converter that comes out next year will create a much better conversion from the CR2 then your current Raw converter. (See the differences between LR1, LR2 and LR3
)
TGrundvig wrote in post #10344215
I just don't have room to save all the RAW images I take when I shoot over 500 homes a year. That's on top of the nature and landscape images I do on the side. Those images I do keep the RAW image. That's a lot of space.
Storage is cheap 
TGrundvig wrote in post #10344215
I hope that helps you to not fear shooting in RAW, you will find that you will only shoot in RAW the more confortable you become.
Agree 