BruceB609
Leading Member
Who would like smaller RAW megapixel options like Canon offers?
There may be some rule that it's better to shoot too large a file size than too small but I feel such a rule is for open ended or undecided objectives only. To me, it's like driving a car with two options. The breaks are on or the accelerator is all the way down. Not a very comfortable ride! How would the trip work out if we could adjust? I recall an Atlanta exhibition by Harry Callahan, where his Rollei color print editions were 2 1/4" x 2 1/4," and they had as much impact as any larger print. How many of us have been excited over an image on the contact sheet only to find it was weaker on enlargement? How many of us have seen pure gold play back on the LCD monitor only to discover "fools" in Photoshop? I feel that there should be no standard size expectation on or way of viewing any image. Some images look best as large prints and some as small. For me, there's no large number of images that work both ways. We can always size things down from a full count RAW but I wonder what camera performances besides memory space and processing time could be enhanced. It would certainly save me a lot of time and wasted space on my backup hardware because controlling that option started much earlier in the process.
I don't know how many cameras are out now with RAW file size options but I'll use Canon 7D as an example of a nice option that I wish I had on the Olympus SLRs I use.
Canon gives you a pick of around 5, 10 or 18 RAW megapixels.
Just to calm my patience over the issue, I bought an E-1 recently to test my 5 MP query. I went out to shoot smaller images that I could take into ACR. After tweeking and resampling just for the sake of comparing with the E-3 images, I found myself that much more frustrated that I can't have this 5 MP RAW option on the newer camera. Pixel counts can vary with character of detail and the only option I have right now is for the hardest details rather than soft. I wonder what it would take for Olympus to offer the same option as Canon's.
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BruceWB
There may be some rule that it's better to shoot too large a file size than too small but I feel such a rule is for open ended or undecided objectives only. To me, it's like driving a car with two options. The breaks are on or the accelerator is all the way down. Not a very comfortable ride! How would the trip work out if we could adjust? I recall an Atlanta exhibition by Harry Callahan, where his Rollei color print editions were 2 1/4" x 2 1/4," and they had as much impact as any larger print. How many of us have been excited over an image on the contact sheet only to find it was weaker on enlargement? How many of us have seen pure gold play back on the LCD monitor only to discover "fools" in Photoshop? I feel that there should be no standard size expectation on or way of viewing any image. Some images look best as large prints and some as small. For me, there's no large number of images that work both ways. We can always size things down from a full count RAW but I wonder what camera performances besides memory space and processing time could be enhanced. It would certainly save me a lot of time and wasted space on my backup hardware because controlling that option started much earlier in the process.
I don't know how many cameras are out now with RAW file size options but I'll use Canon 7D as an example of a nice option that I wish I had on the Olympus SLRs I use.
Canon gives you a pick of around 5, 10 or 18 RAW megapixels.
Just to calm my patience over the issue, I bought an E-1 recently to test my 5 MP query. I went out to shoot smaller images that I could take into ACR. After tweeking and resampling just for the sake of comparing with the E-3 images, I found myself that much more frustrated that I can't have this 5 MP RAW option on the newer camera. Pixel counts can vary with character of detail and the only option I have right now is for the hardest details rather than soft. I wonder what it would take for Olympus to offer the same option as Canon's.
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BruceWB