Marie Meyer
Leading Member
If someone is shooting in controlled conditions where getting the exposure correct every time isn't a problem, and if the photos are destined for social media use, does RAW offer any advantages over JPEG?
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Raw let’s you change the white balance and picture style (portrait vs landscape vs fine detail, etc) non-destructively after capture.If someone is shooting in controlled conditions where getting the exposure correct every time isn't a problem, and if the photos are destined for social media use, does RAW offer any advantages over JPEG?
If you are happy with the results you are getting with JPEG, then why change?If someone is shooting in controlled conditions where getting the exposure correct every time isn't a problem, and if the photos are destined for social media use, does RAW offer any advantages over JPEG?
Jpeg would be fine. I'm a pro and shot jpegs for many years for print and web use.If someone is shooting in controlled conditions where getting the exposure correct every time isn't a problem, and if the photos are destined for social media use, does RAW offer any advantages over JPEG?
I always shot raw in the studio. I wanted maximum opportunity to make adjustments if necessary. And it cost me nothing additional to shoot raw.If someone is shooting in controlled conditions where getting the exposure correct every time isn't a problem, and if the photos are destined for social media use, does RAW offer any advantages over JPEG?
However, you can adjust WB of a JPG too. Just make sure there is something neutral grey in one of the photos in a set. You can click on that to change the WB, and then copy that setting to the other shots.I rarely do all JPEG just because of WB. It's often hard in ambient light to check to see if there's a color cast, and with a target and raw I can almost always get it right. But there are some times I don't even care about that, and sure, a JPEG works fine.
It is possible to adjust white balance in a jpg, yes, just more work and less convenient.However, you can adjust WB of a JPG too. Just make sure there is something neutral grey in one of the photos in a set. You can click on that to change the WB, and then copy that setting to the other shots.I rarely do all JPEG just because of WB. It's often hard in ambient light to check to see if there's a color cast, and with a target and raw I can almost always get it right. But there are some times I don't even care about that, and sure, a JPEG works fine.
An asphalt road surface is a good grey, but a Color Checker is better.
Very often, there is really no "correct" WB, and you can just set it to what you think looks good. Somebody else would set it differently.
Don Cox
The jpg is an easily shareable or uploadable file that can be used right away.Can I please add to this question. What is the advantage of saving both the RAW file and the JPEG? Why would you need the JPEG in addition?
If you keep the RAW file you can always go back to it (time & time again) and make as many different edits as you wish, making lots of different JPEG's from the same file. The in-camera produced JPEG is just one output, based upon your particular cameras settings, which you may like & keep, or you may want to change/edit. But editing a JPEG is limited.Can I please add to this question. What is the advantage of saving both the RAW file and the JPEG? Why would you need the JPEG in addition?
... sometimes you don't see what's wrong until after the shoot ...If someone is shooting in controlled conditions where getting the exposure correct every time isn't a problem, ...
... you can't always predict if a picture will be used for something it wasn't destined for ...and if the photos are destined for social media use, ...
What's the disadvantage of shooting jpg+raw? Storage is cheap.does RAW offer any advantages over JPEG?
Raw is not just about exposure, but about all the tone in between. If you want to use a different tone curve, it will look much better in Raw compared to JPEG.If someone is shooting in controlled conditions where getting the exposure correct every time isn't a problem, and if the photos are destined for social media use, does RAW offer any advantages over JPEG?
No. Lots of photographers submit work professionally using JPEG and have done so for some time now. I have two systems. Fujifilm processes (colour science) their product coming out of the cameras resulting in many shooting JPEG with Fuji. Sony and Leica do as well.If someone is shooting in controlled conditions where getting the exposure correct every time isn't a problem, and if the photos are destined for social media use, does RAW offer any advantages over JPEG?
The algorithms used in cameras for noise reduction and sharpening are designed for speed rather than quality. The sharpening in JPGs tends to give halos -- white lines around the edges of objects. A specialist program such as Topaz Sharpen is very slow but gives hardly any halos.Anything a JPEG can do, a raw can do better. So restricting yourself to JPEG doesn't make sense. I'll always prefer to make decisions myself rather than leave it in the hands of the camera.
Who are "we" ?No. Lots of photographers submit work professionally using JPEG and have done so for some time now. I have two systems. Fujifilm processes (colour science) their product coming out of the cameras resulting in many shooting JPEG with Fuji. Sony and Leica do as well.If someone is shooting in controlled conditions where getting the exposure correct every time isn't a problem, and if the photos are destined for social media use, does RAW offer any advantages over JPEG?
I have both Fuji and Canon gear. I truly wish, and I believe Canon will sooner or later, change how their cameras process the image. Canon is old school, the camera's neutral is used and you work on the image in post. Canon's picture styles are limited, too limited. Folks are wanting an out of camera experience much like an iPhone image, processed needing no work. Or maybe a little crop here or a little straightening here, but after that - good to go.
We are in transition with colour science so you will still have RAW versus JPEG discussions for a long time to come, but I think eventually contemporary colour science will win. The lazy and easy to use technology always wins. I use to have a reel to reel tape recording set up. But even though reel to reel was superior, 8 cassette came along, then cassettes, then CD"s.
IPhones and Smartphone photography is changing photography equipment big time and one of those areas is JPEG. Next a better wireless system, easy to use, not clunky wireless software has to be included in all cameras, pro models or not. We want seamless connection from camera to phone to computer to the internet.
If the images will never be used outside of social media, raw has no advantage. The destruction of information content due to lossy JPEG compression is irrelevant when images are viewed for 5 seconds and forgotten.If someone is shooting in controlled conditions where getting the exposure correct every time isn't a problem, and if the photos are destined for social media use, does RAW offer any advantages over JPEG?