RAW or JPEG

What do you shot, RAW or JPEG


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Dec 15, 2010
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I wonder what other are shooting. I shot almost only JPEGs, mostly I'm happy with the quality, even though I encountered problems with some scenes, where I got some nasty effects, especially in large areas with small color graduation (night sky...). I tried RAW for some of these shoots, but somehow it didn't help that much; probably it has to do with the fact, that my skills at RAW processing are rather limited.
 
I started out using only JPEG. I eventually switched over to RAW and never went back. Never even considered it. It really blew me away at first how much more you could do with a RAW file. You should really try it, Camera Raw (plugin of photoshop) is really not that complicated. A good, high quality monitor makes things a lot easier.
 
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I only switch to JPEG when I want long bursts of continuous shots, following some active subject, hoping for the perfect shot to pop out the string. Shooting raw overwhelms the buffer too quickly.

Oh, I also use JPEG when checking the autofocus on a lens, so that I can zoom in something finer than the thumbnail JPEG in raw images on the back screen.

Other than that, it is raw all the way.
 
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randerson5726 said:
I started out using only JPEG. I eventually switched over to RAW and never went back. Never even considered it. It really blew me away at first how much more you could do with a RAW file. You should really try it, Camera Raw (plugin of photoshop) is really not that complicated. A good, high quality monitor makes things a lot easier.

+1
 
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SDFilmFan said:
I only switch to JPEG when I want long bursts of continuous shots, following some active subject, hoping for the perfect shot to pop out the string. Shooting raw overwhelms the buffer too quickly.

Oh, I also use JPEG when checking the autofocus on a lens, so that I can zoom in something finer than the thumbnail JPEG in raw images on the back screen.

Other than that, it is raw all the way.

Good points. I almost never shoot long enough bursts to need to switch to JPEG.

It still amazes me, though, that cameras can process the sensor data and write it to a JPEG file faster than it can simply write out the RAW file, even with current processor technology and card write speeds.
 
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