I shoot RAW T-shirt from www.froknowsphoto.com
RAW and JPG refer to the two different file types your camera can produce.
RAW
– RAW file is the unedited (unprocessed) image data that you digital SLR camera captures every time you take a photo. Because RAW files are unprocessed, they come out looking flat and dark. RAW images need to be viewed and processed using your camera’s software or in more robust commonly used software like Photoshop, Lightroom, Aperture, etc prior to being ready for display or print.JPEG
– JPEG files are processed right within the camera. How exactly they are processed varies from model to model. While color temperature and exposure are set based on your camera settings when the image is shot, the camera will also process the image to add blacks, contrast, brightness, noise reduction, sharpening (which you can see in the example above) and then render the file to a compressed JPEG. These files are finished and can be viewed and printed immediately after shot.It seems to be one of the biggest debates in digital photography–what’s better: RAW or JPEG? Who wins?
Some pro photographers say JPEG: you should always know the perfect settings for a photo. And others say always shoot in RAW: it’s better quality and you have more power to change things later on.Well, I think both formats have advantages and disadvantages, so rather than take one side for everything, I’ll run through some of the key differences between them, and then suggest when each format makes sense.
RAW vs JPEG
RAW
- Allows maximum control in post-processing- Allows you to change white balance later without any loss of quality
- Allows you to change exposure, saturation, sharpness, curves, etc with less quality loss than you’d experience with JPEG
- larger filesize means you’ll fill up your memory card faster, and it’ll take longer to download images to your computer
- can only take a few shots in a burst before filling up your camera’s buffer
- Require special programs to convert into the JPG format
- Require powerful computers to view and edit
- Can’t be instantly e-mailed or uploaded to online galleries
- Require time and effort to “develop”
JPEG
- Any post-processing will result in quality loss (especially exposure adjustments).Less control over the way the final image appears- Harder to correct mistakes of color and exposure
- Smaller filesize means you can fit more on a memory card (usually twice as many), and you’ll download images faster to your computer
- Allows you to shoot significantly more shots in a burst
- Easy to view and edit with any image editing program
- Easy to modify to e-mail to friends
- Easy to upload to online galleries
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