rsn
Senior Member
I was bored and had just finished reading the millionth post on JPEG's and the usual crowd came in with "I shoot RAW because...." I used to be in this crowd. So decided to ask Deepseek (free artificial intelligence software), when to use JPEG and when to use RAW, below is the response:
"Of course! This is a fundamental question in photography, and the answer boils down to a trade-off between convenience and creative control.
Here’s a simple breakdown of when to choose JPEG over RAW.
The Short Answer
Use JPEG when you need speed, small file sizes, and convenience, and you are confident in the camera's ability to get the look right in-camera.
Use RAW when you need maximum creative control in editing and want to salvage the highest quality from challenging lighting situations.
JPEG Explained (The Finished Product)
A JPEG is a fully processed image. Your camera applies settings like white balance, contrast, saturation, and sharpening according to your picture style presets, then compresses the file, discarding some data to make it small.
When to Use JPEG:
1. For Speed and High Volume
Sports & Wildlife: When you need to shoot long, continuous bursts at high speed, JPEGs allow your camera's buffer to clear much faster, letting you capture more action without the camera slowing down.
Events & Photojournalism: When you need to deliver images quickly or transmit them directly from your camera via FTP, the small file size of JPEG is a massive advantage.
2. For Convenience and Small File Sizes
Everyday & Casual Photography: For family vacations, parties, or social media posts where absolute perfection isn't critical. JPEGs are ready to use straight out of the camera.
Limited Storage Space: If you're traveling or have a small memory card, you can fit many more JPEGs than RAW files.
Quick Sharing: JPEGs are the universal standard. You can take a picture, pop the SD card into any device, and instantly view or share the image without any special software.
3. When You Trust Your Camera's Processing
You've Nailed the Settings: If you are skilled at setting the correct white balance, picture profile, and exposure in-camera, a JPEG can look fantastic with little to no editing needed.
You Don't Enjoy Post-Processing: If you dislike spending time on a computer editing photos, JPEG delivers a finished product. Many modern cameras have excellent in-camera processing that can produce great colors and tones.
RAW Explained (The Digital Negative)
A RAW file is an unprocessed, uncompressed dump of all the data captured by the camera's sensor. It is not a finished image; it's a data file that requires software (like Lightroom or Capture One) to "develop" into a viewable image like a JPEG.
When to Use RAW:
You Plan to Edit Heavily: You have immense flexibility to adjust white balance, exposure, shadows, and highlights with minimal loss in quality.
Challenging Lighting Conditions: In high-contrast scenes (e.g., a backlit subject), a RAW file retains far more detail in the shadows and highlights, allowing you to recover blown-out skies or dark shadows.
Maximum Quality is Critical: For commercial, portrait, or landscape photography where every ounce of detail and dynamic range is needed for large prints or high-end clients.
You're Still Learning Exposure: RAW acts as a safety net, allowing you to correct major exposure mistakes after the fact.
Many cameras offer a mode where they save both a RAW and a JPEG file for every shot you take. This is an excellent option if:
You want the safety and quality of RAW for important shots but need quick, shareable JPEGs.
You can use the JPEGs to quickly cull through your images and only spend time editing the RAW files of the best ones.
The downside is that it consumes storage space even faster.
Final Recommendation
Choose JPEG for: vacations, family events, sports, journalism, or any situation where speed, convenience, and small file sizes are the top priority.
Choose RAW for: professional work, landscapes, portraits, studio photography, or any situation where you know you will want to edit the images for the best possible quality.
Think of it like cooking:
JPEG is a meal from a restaurant—ready to eat and consistent, but you can't easily change the ingredients.
RAW is buying all the raw ingredients—it takes more time and skill to prepare, but you have complete control over the final flavor.
"Of course! This is a fundamental question in photography, and the answer boils down to a trade-off between convenience and creative control.
Here’s a simple breakdown of when to choose JPEG over RAW.
The Short Answer
Use JPEG when you need speed, small file sizes, and convenience, and you are confident in the camera's ability to get the look right in-camera.
Use RAW when you need maximum creative control in editing and want to salvage the highest quality from challenging lighting situations.
JPEG Explained (The Finished Product)
A JPEG is a fully processed image. Your camera applies settings like white balance, contrast, saturation, and sharpening according to your picture style presets, then compresses the file, discarding some data to make it small.
When to Use JPEG:
1. For Speed and High Volume
Sports & Wildlife: When you need to shoot long, continuous bursts at high speed, JPEGs allow your camera's buffer to clear much faster, letting you capture more action without the camera slowing down.
Events & Photojournalism: When you need to deliver images quickly or transmit them directly from your camera via FTP, the small file size of JPEG is a massive advantage.
2. For Convenience and Small File Sizes
Everyday & Casual Photography: For family vacations, parties, or social media posts where absolute perfection isn't critical. JPEGs are ready to use straight out of the camera.
Limited Storage Space: If you're traveling or have a small memory card, you can fit many more JPEGs than RAW files.
Quick Sharing: JPEGs are the universal standard. You can take a picture, pop the SD card into any device, and instantly view or share the image without any special software.
3. When You Trust Your Camera's Processing
You've Nailed the Settings: If you are skilled at setting the correct white balance, picture profile, and exposure in-camera, a JPEG can look fantastic with little to no editing needed.
You Don't Enjoy Post-Processing: If you dislike spending time on a computer editing photos, JPEG delivers a finished product. Many modern cameras have excellent in-camera processing that can produce great colors and tones.
RAW Explained (The Digital Negative)
A RAW file is an unprocessed, uncompressed dump of all the data captured by the camera's sensor. It is not a finished image; it's a data file that requires software (like Lightroom or Capture One) to "develop" into a viewable image like a JPEG.
When to Use RAW:
You Plan to Edit Heavily: You have immense flexibility to adjust white balance, exposure, shadows, and highlights with minimal loss in quality.
Challenging Lighting Conditions: In high-contrast scenes (e.g., a backlit subject), a RAW file retains far more detail in the shadows and highlights, allowing you to recover blown-out skies or dark shadows.
Maximum Quality is Critical: For commercial, portrait, or landscape photography where every ounce of detail and dynamic range is needed for large prints or high-end clients.
You're Still Learning Exposure: RAW acts as a safety net, allowing you to correct major exposure mistakes after the fact.
Many cameras offer a mode where they save both a RAW and a JPEG file for every shot you take. This is an excellent option if:
You want the safety and quality of RAW for important shots but need quick, shareable JPEGs.
You can use the JPEGs to quickly cull through your images and only spend time editing the RAW files of the best ones.
The downside is that it consumes storage space even faster.
Final Recommendation
Choose JPEG for: vacations, family events, sports, journalism, or any situation where speed, convenience, and small file sizes are the top priority.
Choose RAW for: professional work, landscapes, portraits, studio photography, or any situation where you know you will want to edit the images for the best possible quality.
Think of it like cooking:
JPEG is a meal from a restaurant—ready to eat and consistent, but you can't easily change the ingredients.
RAW is buying all the raw ingredients—it takes more time and skill to prepare, but you have complete control over the final flavor.


