Format and Resolution - What You Need to
Know
By: Tedric Garrison
With
a digital camera, when you press the shutter
release, you capture an image on the image sensor.
The image is then written to a pre selected format
and transferred to some type of media card (that can
be used again and again.) There are several
different types of media cards, the manufacture of
the camera determines which media card works with
your particular camera. The media card itself is
like a blank canvas.
What matters to you is what format you are saving on
the media card and what resolution you choose to
save the image at.
Most digital cameras offer three formats: JPEG (
.jpg), TIFF ( .tiff), and RAW format. JPEG's reduce
the size of the file saved, but they also reduce
some image quality. The TIFF format applies all the
settings of the camera and has no image quality
loss, but the files are much larger! The
third file format is called the RAW format. File
sizes are half the size of the TIFF format, because
few camera settings are stored with the image. As
the name implies, RAW format assumes that you will
change contrast; lighting, color balance and other
setting after you get the image. If you want
total control, this is the format for you.
For most of us, the JPEG format is preferred because
it takes less space, all camera settings are
applied, and you can view JPEGs in every photo
editing software known to man. (That's NOT
always the case with pictures saved in the TIFF and
RAW formats.) The example below is only a guide,
since different manufactures have different rates of
compression.
Example of images shot with a 5-Mega pixel**
Camera:
If saved in TIFF format: TIFF = 14.5 MB per image
If saved in JPEG format JPEG = 1.5 MB per image
If saved in RAW format RAW = 7.5 MB per image
(** Mega means Million, therefore . . . a 5 Mega
pixel image refers
to a photo with 5 Million pixels per square inch.)
Format and Resolution are two different
things
Format would be similar to choosing oil color, water
color, or pastel, before you start painting.
Resolution would be the number of colors you choose
to work with. A camera with 2 Mega pixels for
example, would be like having a box with 6 crayons
in it. (Your maximum print size would be about 5x7
inches.) A camera with 5 or 6 Mega pixels would be
like having the big box with 64 crayons in it. (You
could print pictures 18 x 24 inches or larger!) Can
you draw with only six crayons? Of course you can,
but how much more can you do with 64? Obviously, the
higher the Mega Pixels a camera has, the bigger the
image you can print and the more options you have.
Just remember, 64 crayons takes a lot more space in
your hand than only 6 crayons; likewise storing
images made with a big mega pixel camera also takes
up a lot more space on your hard drive.
This Article Written By: Tedric A. Garrison Cedar
City, Utah
Tedric Garrison has done photography for over 30
years. In college; Tedric was an Art Major, and
firmly believes that “Creativity can be taught.”
Today; as a writer and photographer he shares his
wealth of knowledge with the world, at:
http://www.betterphototips.com.
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