digital-freak
Senior Member
Some people in this forum have said the Raw is so much sharper then jpeg.
After reading Phils review, and Ken Rockwells article,
http://www.kenrockwell.com/tech/raw.htm
I decided to do a side by side comparison. In my eyes, I don't see any difference in sharpness. In fact, I see a bit more noise in the Raw that I don't see in the Jpeg.
I didn't save any of the images for posting, plus after converting the NEF's to jpeg for web viewing that would defeat the purpose of the test.
I realize the main reason for raw is more for accurate white balance and exposure tweaking after the fact, but I believe if you spend a little more time while shooting to meter the seen correctly and obtain the correct white balance(even the cameras auto is pretty damn close), then you really don't need to use raw as your primary shooting mode.
I some instances where you have a very wide array of Lights to darks in a single scene, or a more then a single type of light source (i.e. Day light combined with incandescent) Raw might make post processing easier.
I have a 1 Gig card, If I shoot Raw It will hold 95, in Jpeg fine mode it will hold 293. I have decided to shoot mainly in Jpeg fine for most situations and switch to Raw only when I feel the picture will need extensive post processing.
--
Mark
http://www.markmicallef.com (under construction)
After reading Phils review, and Ken Rockwells article,
http://www.kenrockwell.com/tech/raw.htm
I decided to do a side by side comparison. In my eyes, I don't see any difference in sharpness. In fact, I see a bit more noise in the Raw that I don't see in the Jpeg.
I didn't save any of the images for posting, plus after converting the NEF's to jpeg for web viewing that would defeat the purpose of the test.
I realize the main reason for raw is more for accurate white balance and exposure tweaking after the fact, but I believe if you spend a little more time while shooting to meter the seen correctly and obtain the correct white balance(even the cameras auto is pretty damn close), then you really don't need to use raw as your primary shooting mode.
I some instances where you have a very wide array of Lights to darks in a single scene, or a more then a single type of light source (i.e. Day light combined with incandescent) Raw might make post processing easier.
I have a 1 Gig card, If I shoot Raw It will hold 95, in Jpeg fine mode it will hold 293. I have decided to shoot mainly in Jpeg fine for most situations and switch to Raw only when I feel the picture will need extensive post processing.
--
Mark
http://www.markmicallef.com (under construction)