cool. my goal is to sell my photos. so I want the best quality. which I know is Tiff but I want to make sure its worth the extra storage. I have a few thousand photos.
You don't necessarily need to save the Tiffs. 1)Shoot in raw. Save the raw. 2)Process as PSD. Save the PSD. 3)Convert the PSD to tiff to print. Delete the tiff. 4)For web, use jpeg compression on the PSD. (This is how I and many others do it)
If you need to print again later, convert the PSD to tiff.
Or 3)Convert the PSD to tiff, print it and then compress it. Delete the PSD 4)For web use, use jpeg compression on the tiff.(This is how many others do it)
As far as jpegs straight from the camera, the raw image gets processed by the camera and then compressed to a jpeg. There's not a whole lot of information left to process the image properly. If a person likes to do the processing part themselves then you need to start with raw and then convert it to tiff or PSD and finally jpeg if it's needed for the web. The end result will be better but it involves a lot more time and some fairly large originals to save. Jpeg from the camera is fine for those who are willing to give up some of the quality available to save all that time and storage space.
Jpegs aren't such a bad thing. Besides the convenience of having most of the processing done by the camera, giving a ready to print file which is completely adequate for the people who believe it is completely adequate for them, jpeg conversion is a rather amazing way, if done at a reasonable quality setting, to downsize a photo to a dimension and file size that is easily sent by email or posted on the web without any noticeable loss of quality. Not noticeable enough to worry about anyway, unless you use very low quality jpeg compression. Looks like crap at full size on a monitor but that's not the way jpegs are meant to be used. Full size is for printing or making into smaller sizes for web or email and despite it's size is a small enough file to store 1000's on your computer and covert to any size you wish whenever you wish.
Yea, jpeg is a lossy compression method. But try posting your full size raw, tiff or PSD on Flickr. Ain't gonna work. You need to use (amazing) jpeg compression to get it down to 600x800 to post it.
And one of the best ways to make noise less noticeable is to compress the original jpeg down to a modest size for viewing on the web. Another bonus for people who really don't want to mess around processing their photos.
I use raw not just because it's 'better' but because I can do the processing myself. I like that part. If digital hadn't come along, I'd spend my computer processing time in a darkroom instead. And I'd like it. Jpeg is for people who didn't like the darkroom part when we used film. And can ya blame them? It's definitely not for everyone. Just like any other hobby you could think of.