Most digital cameras (with the exception of many compact cameras) offer the option to shoot both in Raw and Raw + JPEG formats. Whereas JPEGs, as a compressed format, get various in-camera algorithms ...
Cameras, including phones, shoot JPEGs by default, but this compressed format saves a fraction of the data your camera’s sensor is capable of recording. The alternative is to shoot in RAW, a filetype ...
Your digital SLR or high-end compact camera gives you the option of saving your photos as Raw files or as JPEGs. Which should you pick? It’s an old question, but it isn’t as easy to answer as you ...
Got myself a Canon DSLR and I've started taking pictures both JPEGs and RAW, but frankly, I don't know what to do with the RAWs. How do I get started learning how to post-process the RAW images taken ...
Adam Z. Lein has been a tech journalist at Pocketnow since 2002. He's also been a photographer since 1995 and a web developer & graphic designer since 1997 while working on the DEC intranet. He's also ...
Is RAW the format for you? When you first start out with your camera you'll probably shoot in the JPEG format we've all come to know but some cameras (DSLR, Bridge and some top-end compacts) also have ...
All digital cameras record images in JPEG format and JPEG is the only file format that can be viewed in all viewing devices and edited by all image editors. For this reason, JPEG is known as the ...
Raw files contain the image data as it is captured by the camera’s sensor with only minimal processing applied. … Raw files contain the image data as it is captured by the camera’s sensor with only ...
All DSLRs, and even many point-and-shoots nowadays, can shoot in RAW format, meaning you can save your images as a completely unprocessed file that offers the potential for a higher-quality photo. The ...