My question is: Is there somewhere a sort of workflow guide or checklist for:
Everyone will have a different way of doing things. I suggest you test in this way:
-- converting from RAW in DPP
Load all files into DPP. In Preferences in the EOS Utility, you can designate a destination folder. Start with naming your folders with Date/Subject or location. This is one way to set up a filing system, and you can change things later. You want a system that lets you retrive an original file later, quickly!
Pick one image, load into the Editing Window and call up the tool Palette. In the RAW tab, play around with the White Balance Options. Experiment with the Color Temperature Slider. Do some other manipulations with color, contrast, brightness, sharpening, whatever. There are also processing tools on the RGB Tab. Compare what you can do with each. When finished with processing, convert as a 16bit TIFF. This will be a large image and will be lossless so that for printing, you will have the best image. At this point you can also convert to a JPG for email or web posting.
... after you process a RAW file in DPP, is the original saved untouched and a new file created?
It's best not to save changes to the RAW file. This is so that you will always have an untouched original to go back to. So, close DPP and decline to save any changes to the RAW file.
Now, go back to the same RAW image in DPP, adjust your White Balance, and do no other manipulations/processing.Then import into Photoshop as a 16bit TIFF with a different filename (version 2 or something) and do all of your processing there. You can save your processing changes to the TIFF file with no loss or destruction for best printing image. At this point you can also save as a JPG for email or web posting
Compare what you processed in DPP with that in PS and decide which you like better.
Once you decide this, you can begin to build a routine that works for you. You may do just White Balance manipulation in DPP and everything else in PS, or a little processing in each!
regards,
-rich
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Careful photographers run their own tests.