Digital Photography: The
RAW vs JPG Debate
By: Gary Nugent
If
you use a digital camera (I use a Canon EOS Digital
Rebel/300D myself) and that camera is an SLR, then
it most likely can record images in RAW format. In
general, you should record your images at the
highest resolution possible. If you only have a
small memory card and are worried that you can only
record a few RAW images on it, then it's time to buy
a bigger card! [They don't cost much these days].
You can always shrink an image after it's taken but
you can't enlarge a small one without introducing
artifacts. At the very least, you should have your
camera record images in Hires JPG format but RAW
format is even better.
Any kind of JPG written to your camera's memory card
will be processed in some way. JPGs, by their very
nature, lose information in an image. If you
repeatedly save a JPG, you'll lose more and more
detail in it and see more artifacts appearing. Also,
if you've set your camera up to do some image
manipulation (e.g. contast/brightness adjustments),
these will also be applied before your camera writes
the image out to the memory card. In such cases, you
could end up with images that have burned out
highlights or shadows that are so deep that they
contain no detail. Such areas of an image may be
irreparable even with the likes of Adobe PhotoShop.
RAW images, on the other hand, are simply that -
raw. What the camera sees is dumped (without any
image manipulation whatsoever) onto the memory card.
RAW images also tend to contain more information and
detail and have larger file sizes than similar
resolution JPGs. The problem with RAW files is that
they've not been the easiest to work with; for
example, Windows Explorer cannot show RAW files as
thumbnail images so, unless you've renamed your
image files with meaningful names, you won't know
what the images are when you come back to them a
couple of months later.
This
is where software such as RAWShooter Essentials [http://www.pixmantec.com/index2.html]
(RSE) comes in. This software lets digital
photographers of all abilities import, view, edit
and convert large batches of RAW files (to TIF
files). RSE is currently free - it won't be for too
long - so grab a copy now. Having used it (i have no
association with the company who produce it), I can
say it makes working with RAW files a doddle; much
easier than using the software that came with my
Canon EOS Digital Rebel.
With your converted RAW files, you have full control
over what manipulations will be carried out to
produce the final image, using packages such as
Adobe Photoshop, Adobe Elements or Paint Shop Pro.
The better RAW conversion packages also include
basic contrast, brightness and color management
controls, so you may not even need a separate image
manipulation package. Some even provide tools for
compensating for over- or under-exposed images.
By shooting RAW images, you give yourself complete
control over color and exposure and it's you, rather
than the camera, that decides what adjustments are
applied to reproduce the tones and contrast of the
original scene. It also lets you maximize the
quality of your final image for whatever output you
want, whether that's on a monitor, as an inkjet
print or sent to one of the digital photo labs for
printing.
Various RAW conversion software is available (I've
already mentioned RAWShooter Essentials) to allow
you to process digital images to the highest quality
possible. "Capture One" and "Breezebrowser" are both
highly regarded, although you have to pay for these.
A demo version of Capture One is available so you
can try before you buy.
Probably like yourself, I shot all my photos in
hires JPG mode until I got switched on to recording
my images in RAW mode. Yes, I had to buy a larger
capacity memory card, but even 1Gb cards are pretty
cheap these days, and with image files being about
6Mb a piece, that still lets me record well over 200
images on the card - that's equivalent to over 6
rolls of 35mm film (at 36 frames per roll)!
So, if you're not already recording in RAW mode,
make the switch today and take full creative control
of your photographs.
Just after I'd finished this article, I was looking
around the websites of some professional
photographers who use digital cameras to see if what
they had to say on the topic of RAW Vs JPG. What I
learned surprised me. Quite a number of them shoot
in JPG mode rather than RAW. The reason is time.
Professionals expect to get "the image" in camera
using compositional techniques, filters and a
knowledge of their subject and they simply don't
have the time to manipulate images to achieve a
desired result. Any such time would cost them money
by taking time away from being out there taking
photos and earning a living.
The amateur photographer is in a more luxurious
position. Our livelihoods don't depend on our
results and, if a photo isn't quite up to spec. we
have the time to tweak it and bring out its hidden
attractions, rather than junking it and moving on
the the next photo. The lesson to be learned is that
we should always try to get the best picture
possible on the day with the camera rather than
becoming lazy and assuming sloppy pictures can
always be corrected, cropped and manipulated when we
get home. Post-processing of photos should be about
making good pictures even better rather than so-so
or bad pictures just acceptable.
Gary Nugent is a software engineer by profession and
has been in the business for over 20 years.
Photography has been a hobby for an even longer
period of time and he's now even more passionate
about it since making the switch to using a digital
SLR camera.
Gary is also passionate about astronomy and
publishes the "Photon" PDF astronomy ezine along
with writing the acclaimed LunarPhase Pro and JupSat
Pro astronomy software packages (available through
his Night Sky Observer website).
Great Landscape Photography:
http://www.great-landscape-photography.com
Night Sky Observer:
http://www.nightskyobserver.com
Article Source:
http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Gary_Nugent
|