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Digital Lifestyle
Images, Graphic Design, and Digital Photography
RAW to .jpeg .tiff?
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<blockquote data-quote="chas_m" data-source="post: 1604988"><p>"Best" is a subjective term here, so there's no simple answer.</p><p></p><p>RAW takes up a lot of space because it is, if you like, the original digital "negative," ie contains 100 percent of the information gathered for the picture. Myself and most photographers I know shoot in raw, import into Lightroom or Aperture, review the shots and pick the winners and discard the losers, edit those to perfection and save in both TIFF and JPG for varying purposes. The original RAW files and TIFF files are, in my case, stored elsewhere or burned to CD/DVD for archiving purposes, with high- (600dpi) and low-quality (72dpi) JPG files used for day-to-day web stuff, client stuff, that sort of thing.</p><p></p><p>This is my workflow. Others may work somewhat differently. Storage, by and large, is very cheap.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="chas_m, post: 1604988"] "Best" is a subjective term here, so there's no simple answer. RAW takes up a lot of space because it is, if you like, the original digital "negative," ie contains 100 percent of the information gathered for the picture. Myself and most photographers I know shoot in raw, import into Lightroom or Aperture, review the shots and pick the winners and discard the losers, edit those to perfection and save in both TIFF and JPG for varying purposes. The original RAW files and TIFF files are, in my case, stored elsewhere or burned to CD/DVD for archiving purposes, with high- (600dpi) and low-quality (72dpi) JPG files used for day-to-day web stuff, client stuff, that sort of thing. This is my workflow. Others may work somewhat differently. Storage, by and large, is very cheap. [/QUOTE]
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RAW to .jpeg .tiff?
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