Ilovemycam
No longer a newbie, moving up!
- Joined
- Oct 12, 2012
- Messages
- 1,070
- Reaction score
- 113
- Location
- Mid Atlantic
- Can others edit my Photos
- Photos OK to edit
Just post pix. Pix is what we deal with, not words. Lets see jpeg vs raw.
So shoot JPEG. What a good idea! Virtually everyone shoot JPEG some of the time.
Just don't pretend that there isn't any advantage to RAW, eh?
There is certainly not always an advantage in every instance.
...
In many other situations, it is more ambiguous than that, and in some, RAW is clearly superior, i admit.
I didn't tell anybody that. Of course there are advantages.But if you try to tell people that there's no advantage to RAW
Laziness is a possible pitfall of using RAW. Not a guaranteed one. I tried to make this very clear. The disadvantage is having to deal with the temptation, which takes some effort. Some less disciplined or more newbie photographers are likely to succumb to the temptation. Seasoned pros can probably handle it just fine and not.it isn't because they are lazy or ignorant.
Your intentions here, clearly, were to 1) reduce the contrast of the actual scene, and 2) up the saturation. Simple histogramming of your jpeg versus your intended shows a huge, two-peak-with-valley-in-the-middle mega contrasty pattern on the jpeg, versus a fairly even distribution in the intended.
The saturation is not a big deal, because upping saturation does not degrade data (there's already plenty of hue information in the jpeg. They're just boring hues, but the data is there, and thus doesn't have to be invented or stretched causing banding).
The contrast, however, IS a big deal. In order to follow my suggested process, you should have shot this with a custom picture mode of [0 -4 0 0] ([sharpness contrast saturation color tone]).
Did you do that? If not, then this is not a valid challenge photo, because I never claimed to be able to make whatever you want happen without any consideration of settings when taking it. In other words, you threw out the data that I needed and kept a bunch that I didn't need, when with the right settings, you could have done the opposite and made it possible to match.
Most people don't routinely do what I am suggesting (not necessarily because it's wrong. Possibly just because it requires more thinking in exchange for time, and because it is not the default setting). Thus, it is very unlikely that any existing photos are going to be valid challenge photos here. If you don't routinely use picture style and white balance in camera before a shoot to push the jpeg as far as possible in the right direction, then none of your old photos will work for demonstration purposes. You'd have to go take a new photo with optimal settings, and then post that as a challenge to match to the RAW processed version.
So shoot JPEG. What a good idea! Virtually everyone shoot JPEG some of the time.
Just don't pretend that there isn't any advantage to RAW, eh?
Most people don't do that because there's no need to, if you shoot in raw then none of that matters. Let's approach it from a different angle: what's the advantage of shooting and editing in JPG over raw? I really don't see any, if you do that you have to go to way more trouble to achieve results that might nearly be as good.
I've outlined them multiple times:
1) RAW takes up 5x more memory on your card than jpeg does (16 bit is 2x + the light compression of OOC jpeg). Doubly problematic if you're on vacation and don't have a computer with you with proprietary software for converting RAWs (thus, can't clear out your card at the end of the day).
2) RAW dramatically reduces the number of photos you can take in a burst on low-mid range camera bodies (in mine, RAW alone will limit you to 1 FPS after just 7 shots, and RAW+jpeg will limit you to 1 FPS after just TWO shots. Jpeg allows 4 FPS continuously seemingly forever, by comparison)
3) RAW cannot be used OOC even if you dont want to edit it at all. Websites and printers can't read it, so you are obligated to process it through photoshop or whatever other RAW software. This is a disadvantage if you are taking normal photos of friends or something, for instance, and are not trying to win the pullitzer prize in photojournalism. Oftentimes while just out and about taking photos, I will have about a 30/70 mixture of funny snapshots that I want to share with somebody on facebook as a joke vs. real images I intend to be beautiful. With jpeg, I can pick out the silly ones and post without processing. With RAW, I'd have to painstakingly process them all first OR sit there and constantly switch back and forth between formats in camera, OR use up even more memory and cripple my ability to take burst shots with RAW + jpg.
4) For those images that you do want to process regardless, RAW takes much longer to load into photoshop than jpeg. At best this is annoying (if automated/uniform conversions) and I have to go eat a sandwich or something instead of editing photos like I want to, while it processes slowly. At worst, this wastes tons of my time, if I am actually attempting to do photo-by-photo optimized RAW conversions and am sitting at the keyboard the whole time.
The next two are more subjective musings than cold hard disadvantages, but:
5) In my opinion, the safety net of RAW encourages a photographer to be a little lazy and not worry about lighting or coloration in the field. Lighting, color, and exposure are all part of composition! And if you don't consider them carefully, then you won't even take the same photos that you would have if you did. i don't mean that you would have used different settings. I mean that if you don't consider these things, you will not even end up pointing your camera at the same scenes as if you do. And usually, what you do end up pointing at will be substandard composition. No amount of post processing can ever fix poorly conceived composition.
IF it were the case that RAW was the only way to achieve technical clarity and vividness in a print, then this would be a temptation that you'd just have to suck it up and learn to avoid. But IF you can actually achieve the same quality with jpeg (point of this thread is that I believe you can), then the ability to force yourself to not give in to that temptation to be lazy is a very nice feature. And if you're thinking about these things anyway as you shoot, then the picture style settings, etc. will be second nature side effects, and not a hassle at all.
6) Depending on how much you take editing of RAWs into your own hands, you may be shooting yourself in the foot. This varies depending on how you use them. If you edit RAWs in high quality, custom made RAW converters by major brand name software companies, then you're probably fine. But if you attempt to do basic things like noise reduction and sharpening yourself using sub-optimal software, you are almost guaranteed to end up doing worse than the professional Canon or Nikon engineers do in modern cameras, unless you spend half an hour fine tuning every little thing specifically to each image and have years of practice. In short: RAWs used naively by amateurs who don't use the right tools can lead to worse results than even a jpeg OOC.
Your intentions here, clearly, were to 1) reduce the contrast of the actual scene, and 2) up the saturation. Simple histogramming of your jpeg versus your intended shows a huge, two-peak-with-valley-in-the-middle mega contrasty pattern on the jpeg, versus a fairly even distribution in the intended.
The saturation is not a big deal, because upping saturation does not degrade data (there's already plenty of hue information in the jpeg. They're just boring hues, but the data is there, and thus doesn't have to be invented or stretched causing banding).
The contrast, however, IS a big deal. In order to follow my suggested process, you should have shot this with a custom picture mode of [0 -4 0 0] ([sharpness contrast saturation color tone]).
Did you do that? If not, then this is not a valid challenge photo, because I never claimed to be able to make whatever you want happen without any consideration of settings when taking it. In other words, you threw out the data that I needed and kept a bunch that I didn't need, when with the right settings, you could have done the opposite and made it possible to match.
Most people don't routinely do what I am suggesting (not necessarily because it's wrong. Possibly just because it requires more thinking in exchange for time, and because it is not the default setting). Thus, it is very unlikely that any existing photos are going to be valid challenge photos here. If you don't routinely use picture style and white balance in camera before a shoot to push the jpeg as far as possible in the right direction, then none of your old photos will work for demonstration purposes. You'd have to go take a new photo with optimal settings, and then post that as a challenge to match to the RAW processed version.
OK, got home and snapped a photo of my neighbor's Victorian house. Here's my version processed from the raw file:
![]()
Canon camera with the picture style set to faithful and the contrast set to -4 as you require.
Here's your JPEG: Victorian house
Waiting breathlessly.
Joe
Ok, no one cares. Shoot how you want. Others will do the same. Get over it.
Okay here you go. Images wouldn't paste full size into the forum, so I made them both the same resolution as the raw one you gave me originally,
Okay here you go. Images wouldn't paste full size into the forum, so I made them both the same resolution as the raw one you gave me originally, and put them on imgur:
imgur: the simple image sharer
Click back and forth from image #1 and image #2 at the top of the screen.
Or look below (these are smaller for some reason than the imgur ones). My version from the jpeg on the left, raw version on the right.
Setting your picture style and white balance is something you would do only once for a given lighting situation (e.g. set it once when you start in mid day, then maybe reset at sunset, or if you switch to indoors, etc.), outside of extraordinary circumstances.
Shooting jpeg, i was able to fire at full speed for something like 50 shots in a row before I gave up and assumed it was just infinite.
Shooting RAW only, my camera stopped after 7 shots and had to sit there and think for like 2 seconds. Then each subsequent photo was about 1 per second instead of 4, with thinking in between each time.
The actual thing I am describing however, is. "Go do this thing that requires a bit of extra complexity, but not as much as dealing with RAWs, and let's see if it has any impact on image quality."
At WORST, this is equally as complex as dealing with RAWs. Even in optimal circumstances for your side of the argument, where somebody simply auto converts every single RAW to jpeg without touching their keyboard (using it only as a fallback safety net for catastrophic mistakes), it still equates to pushing a couple extra buttons vs. pushing a couple of other extra buttons.