
Using lightroom I don't see how RAW means any more effort than JPG, it's just greater detail traded off against storage space.
Thank you guys i will give it a go with one camera and jpgs with the other until i get the hang of it cheers![]()
Ok go start one, but on a serious note im going to give Raw a fair chance and see how it goes thanks to everybody for the advice...RayThe title of this thread should so have been :
'RAW - what is it good for ?'
The title of this thread should so have been :
'RAW - what is it good for ?'[/QUOTEa
Absolutly nothing.
say it again
lol.
I do shoot in jpeg.
would love to give raw a real bash but lightroom confuses me so much i removed the prog as it over road everything else and got on me pip.
what other prog could i use possibly free.
Ive been using ACDSEE Pro if thats any use to youThe title of this thread should so have been :
'RAW - what is it good for ?'[/QUOTEa
Absolutly nothing.
say it again
lol.
I do shoot in jpeg.
would love to give raw a real bash but lightroom confuses me so much i removed the prog as it over road everything else and got on me pip.
what other prog could i use possibly free.![]()
I was like you, up until a few months ago.
The thing that put me off was the time you have to spend editing. At least with JPEG you can just load them onto the PC, and away you go!
But once you see the difference in the two, there's no turning back.
You have more control over RAW's. An over (or under) exposed shot can be rescued very well in RAW. A JPEG isn't that easy, if not impossible to rescue.
There's also a way of editing a whole batch of RAW's using Adobe Bridge.
Which saves time doing each one individually.
I would never go back to JPEG now!
HELPive just took some shots in Raw but cs2 tell me it cant open them its the wrong kind of document
also which Raw do i use +L OR +M 0r +S
RAW is a necessity to me; It's like the choice between shooting film and developing it yourself or sending it off to some automated machine that tries to do what it thinks works based on the film (and then summararily burns the negatives) in my mind.
The title of this thread should so have been :
'RAW - what is it good for ?'
Just as a matter of interest Paul - I see that like me you're using Olympus gear - what software do you use please?Or one could say jpegs like shooting slide film where you needed the skill to nail it in the camera and raw is like shooting negative for the safety of the extra exposure latititude.
Just a raw shooter and old time film man playing devils advocate.![]()
Or one could say jpegs like shooting slide film where you needed the skill to nail it in the camera and raw is like shooting negative for the safety of the extra exposure latititude.
Just a raw shooter and old time film man playing devils advocate.![]()
Ok so ive decided to shoot in Raw, is there any other settings i need to tweak or do i just leave everything else alone ie picture standard etc etc etc
I'd say - it depends
How useful is that !!!
In the studio environment there's no real benefit in shooting in raw over jpeg as there's no need for altering such as exposure or white balance (assuming it's set correctly in the first place!); but it does take up a huge amount of extra card & harddrive space
For everywhere else where there's less certainty, then raw can certainly be more useful for its latitude for adjustment
So, it depends on what you're trying to achieve and to a large extent how good you are at getting everything right at capture, against how much PP work you expect to do too
If in doubt - shoot raw
DD
hmm, thought I'd give RAW a play as well, as seems to be all the rage - if i don't like it, what have I lost? Nothing.
Went out yesterday with Pentax K-m and shot loads of working pics in RAW - nothing special, just to have a play with, but CS3 won't open them. Tried using Adobe Bridge and File>Open With>photoshop CS3 - again didn't work.
HELPive just took some shots in Raw but cs2 tell me it cant open them its the wrong kind of document![]()
WRT not being able to open it. You probably need to download a newer plug-in for ACR. Or possibly with a 40D you need CS3, I'm not sure.
Ive been using ACDSEE Pro if thats any use to you![]()
Budget isnt a problem its brain power thats the problem, i will persevere for a while and see how it goesWhilst ACDSee is great for viewing and somewhat organising images, i have never thought of their software as a great for photo editing. For RAW in my view, you would be much better by using a proper RAW conversion software that is designed for it (like Lightroom, Bibble, Aperture etc). If budget is a problem for this then use a free alternatives - one that comes immediately to mind is Rawtherapee - despite being in RC state it is very good for free software and can compete in quality of the conversion with the "big guns".