Reply #14 - March 07, 2008, 01:19:18 PM
When working with RAW files, it's not as hard as one seems to think it is.
You open one image, say from a wedding, the basic color correction is done and the image is woken up, sort to speak.
Well, you have 50 more of those images in the same lighting condition. All you have to do from the bridge is select those images with the one that is complete, CTRL/Command R they open up in raw. Select the one that is corrected and then select all and wham bam, done, hmm that was about a min.
O, and you have "LOTS of INFO" in comparison to a jpeg, plus, the image is still original, no damage.
Your workflow in the long run, is much faster.
BTW, I'm no rookie, I'm in college full time, we are "Learning" ways to improve our workflow, and the learning process is with "Weddings" as our example.
I need blow my horn loudly sometimes as some may take me as a hobby shooter. Far from it.
So, to keep it short, YES, your are greatly missing out if you don't try and give RAW a chance. Rome was not built in three days.
As far as comparing this and that, it's all in fun, BUT, RAW!!!!!!! is the WAY to GO, don't be ignorant to it y'all, you're missing out.
File size is a worry for some, however, as a professional which most profess, no EXCUSE, you're making money and External hard drives are priced nicely.
And as such, it is to your utmost to give QUALITY. Your camera has RAW, use it. I'm not sorry to anyone on this statement.
Now, I'm serious.

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