Simple topic. Why is Raw so grand?
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pilotdude22 Senior Member 443 posts Joined Nov 2010 More info | Dec 27, 2010 11:13 | #1 Simple topic. Why is Raw so grand? Hi.
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gonzogolf dumb remark memorialized More info | Dec 27, 2010 11:18 | #2 When you take shot using the .jpg setting your camera takes a raw shot first, capturing all the data from the sensor. Your camera then, using your picture style settings, converts it to a .jpg and stores it on the card and discards the extra data. If you shoot it in raw you get to decide after the fact whether your picture style settings were the correct ones. You get more lattitude for things like saturation, sharpness, white balance, and if you miss exposure more lattitude to fix a blown shot. Basically you make decisions that you would otherwise leave up to your camera, and you dont have to make those decisions before you ever take the shot.
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tzalman Fatal attraction. 13,497 posts Likes: 213 Joined Apr 2005 Location: Gesher Haziv, Israel More info | Dec 27, 2010 11:25 | #3 Read this and all will be revealed: Elie / אלי
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e02937 Goldmember 2,714 posts Joined Dec 2008 More info | Dec 27, 2010 11:29 | #4 Upsides: Canon 7d
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ssim POTN Landscape & Cityscape Photographer 2005 10,884 posts Likes: 6 Joined Apr 2003 Location: southern Alberta, Canada More info | This subject has been debated/discussed here and elsewhere since the inception of the RAW format. It certainly has its benefits. I know there are some that will shoot this no matter what they are shooting, a habit that I don't subscribe to. My life is like one big RAW file....way too much post processing needed.
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barkingspud Senior Member 511 posts Likes: 3 Joined Sep 2010 Location: Chi-Town Burbs More info | Dec 27, 2010 12:34 | #6 Using the Film to Digital analogy, think of a RAW file as the original negative (or positive if you wish) image. You can process and re-process the original image while keeping the original intact. With a JPEG image, your stuck with what comes out of the camera. You can post process a JPEG but your starting out with an image that has already been processed/compressed and pixels thrown away.
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DigitalSpecialist Goldmember 2,286 posts Likes: 1 Joined May 2008 Location: Finding a New World, thru my camera More info | Dec 27, 2010 12:45 | #7 You need to do research, then come to your own conclusion as to whether Raw is best for you. JIM
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tonylong ...winded More info | Dec 27, 2010 14:13 | #8 Here's the FAQ for Raw from the FAQ sticky at the top of the page: Tony
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