RAW (&JPEG??)?

davek

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david
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Fellow togs,

I've recently downloaded Lightroom 3 for a 30 day trial and am loving it. I see a move to RAW coming.

However, a simple question:

What is the benefit of selecting RAW & JPEG in the camera rather than just RAW?

From my PoV is just adds extra images with no particular advantage (viewing in Elements or LR3)

Thanks in advance! :)
 
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For most people no advantage. If you need to get jpegs to the client quickly and work on the raw later - then maybe. I always just shoot raw.
 
I'm usually more than happy with prints from my carefully tweaked JPEGs, but I often shoot RAW & JPEG. Why?

For good reasons (few take time to listen to!) I prefer shooting JPEGs.

If I'm 'shooting from the hip' I may not get close to the results I'd prefer. As a result I may have to pull the data further than a JPEG will allow (like in areas of smooth graduated tone). But that's pretty rare.

Secondly, David, I may want to create a B&W image, and it's best to have some extra tonal information for that working in layers, etc.

Sam

PS: I'd bet some women might have a PoV too!
 
One advantage is when your shooting with the camera set to black and white, this way you get a B+W preview in camera and a full colour raw for processing later, this can help to "see" B+W if your not used to it and still give you the advantage of either a full colour image after or the better B+W conversion options in photoshop.
The other main reason for shooting both is if you need a speedy jpeg for uploading or press type work, although some converter are pretty quick anyway.
 
One advantage is when your shooting with the camera set to black and white, this way you get a B+W preview in camera and a full colour raw for processing later, this can help to "see" B+W if your not used to it and still give you the advantage of either a full colour image after or the better B+W conversion options in photoshop.
That's an excellent tip, thanks. I can't "see" B&W very well, but trying this might help.
 
i do both because if i copy my flash cards onto my hard drive and have like a 100 shots to go through i can quickly look at the JPEGS in infanview to see which i don't need, much faster than converting the RAW files and then deciding what you want
 
i do both because if i copy my flash cards onto my hard drive and have like a 100 shots to go through i can quickly look at the JPEGS in infanview to see which i don't need, much faster than converting the RAW files and then deciding what you want

I only shoot RAW, no need for the JPEGs as the FastStone Image viewer is quicker and easier to use than Irfanview.
 
Really can't see the point in shooting both. If I want a load of jpegs with the in-camera settings I'll just batch process the raws in DPP.
 
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