People here are only stating their preference in what appears to me a non biased way. You, in a biased way, are saying that everyone is wrong for recommending RAW since you can do the same stuff with .jpgs.
- A lot of people say you "cannot" adjust WB in JPEG.
False
- A lot of peope say you "cannot" adjust exposure in JPEG.
False
- A lot of people say you "cannot" recover shadow details in JPEG.
False
- A lot of people say you "cannot" re-save a JPEG without losing quality.
False
- A lot of people say RAW is automatically better just because it's uncompressed.
False
- A lot of people say RAW is automatically better because it's 12/14/16-bits vs 8-bits for JPEG.
False
- A lot of people say you "cannot" go back and re-edit old JPEGs with newer/better software.
False
I see these reasons being given for shooting RAW
all the time and they're just not true. A lot of these myths come from the RAW software that's out there that supports a lot more adjustments with RAW files and very little with JPEG. It doesn't mean that you "cannot" do those things with JPEG. It just means that that
specific software cannot do those adjustments specifically with JPEGs. Other software most certainly can. I seriously have had people tell me they shoot RAW because you "cannot" adjust exposure with JPEG.

In Capture NX for Nikon exposure is a slider bar adjustment for RAW, but you can only do crude curves to adjust exposure for JPEG thus leading to the "you cannot adjust exposure in JPEG" myth. In DxO exposure adjustment is a slider bar for either RAW or JPEG. Other software is similar.
Like I said above, "a lot" (not all) of the reasons for not shooting JPEG and to shoot RAW instead are outright false at the worst, or exaggerated at best. And if those are your reasons, why are you even bothering with RAW? You don't need to because you
can do all of that with JPEG to nearly the same extent you can with RAW. If I'm pointing out that the reasons one gives for shooting RAW don't hold up from a technical standpoint and simply aren't true, then how is that being biased? It's like someone claims 1+1 = 3, and I say no, it's 2, and then they call me "biased" for pointing that out.
You could easily just say you can do anything with a .jpg that you could do in raw and be done but when you call everyone out it starts arguments.
The arguments start when people say things about JPEG or JPEG shooters that simply aren't true
AND when a JPEG shooter actually bothers to argue back which does not occur 99.999999% of the time thus leading to a false consensus about JPEG based on bad or highly debatable information. :greenpbl: If people would just stick to the facts then there would be no nonsense to clean up and hence no war.
I shoot RAW when...
- I need maximum leeway to fix any mistakes for critical shots, such as overexposure on a JPEG where you're hosed.
- When I'm rushed for time in a shoot and won't have any time to dial in the camera or lighting and am just going to have to deal with what I get, heck yeah I shoot RAW.
Others shoot RAW because...
- They like to do more than just basic or moderate editing, might do things in multiple steps and save in a lossless higher bit format, and so it makes PERFECT sense to start out in a lossless high bit format in the first place.
- They have no Auto Contrast (Canon) and it's too difficult to adjust it or for your eyes to notice it and your JPEG outputs end up getting blown which you could have easily fixed if you shot in RAW (friend of mine). I'm spoiled by Auto Contrast and other automated JPEG output settings on my Nikon - it's never failed me, and JPEGs come out looking great. Can't say the same for other systems though.
You're correct, I did do editing to the two photos I posted. The originals were actually more on the bland side but here's the before and after.
Original:
After PP in DxO software:
For "Beginners": This is within the leeway of adjustment for getting large quality prints out of JPEG. If you want to tweak things much heavier than this, by all means shoot RAW or use better technique, whichever you prefer. If I wanted to bring the beach up a lot more I really would have needed a 3-stop Grad ND filter rather than the 2-stop that I had. I did all that in just a few minutes. DxO makes it easy, and it doesn't touch your original file so you can go back and re-tweak to your heart's content. In fact I did just that. I haven't printed this one, but I have printed some others that I PP'ed similarly at about 3-feet wide that are waiting to go up in my house and they look spectacular.
changes made:
- leveling and slight crop
- auto sharpening
- applied Velvia film profile (non-linear color adjustments)
- applied mild "Smart Vibrancy" adjustment
- mild lighting correction to bring the beach up just a tad, but not too much
- cooled off the White Balance just a tad
- minor exposure adjustment
- probably some other minor stuff that I forgot
This looks a bit overcooked color wise, but I have it tweaked for the printer that I use that tends to have a bit duller colors. If it's not right, I can go back and re-adjust from the original JPEG again later. No big deal at all, but even on screen I like it. I'm like KR in that I like more wild colors in my landscape shots.
BTW, when I say "without losing quality" in reference to JPEG adjustments, what I'm actually talking about is quality differences that you can see in actual prints viewed at reasonable differences. Some people define a loss of quality as any difference they can make out when viewing something with their nose touching their screen at 100% (nose into a 3 foot wide print) or even 200% (nose into a 6 foot wide print). This is extremely stringent and
ridiculously stringent considering most people don't view photos like that. I usually review photos and adjustments at 50% or less. I only view at 100% if I'm checking focus for the most part. The most extreme example I've seen are those that use special photoshop layer/threshold masks to highlight the smallest of differences. These are
invisible period, even in prints, and even on the very best monitor viewed at ridiculously high magnification, which is why they have to use photoshop to "see" any difference. I no longer consider that photography but rather computer geekery or analysis paralysis.
@ Arch: Can't see your photo due to firewall issues atm but I'll check it out later.