RAW Files

JulesWex

New member
Hello,

Wondering how any of you would suggest the best way to store RAW Files, or if I should at all? I upload from my D5100 to iPhoto and then I'm not sure what to do with both sets of pics?

Suggestions?
 

Krs_2007

Senior Member
I convert to jpeg after editing and I don't feel like I need them for anything else then I delete the RAW files. I do keep some RAW files for later projects.


Kevin,

Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk HD
 

dea

Senior Member
same as me. i convert the RAW versions into JPEG after editing and then delete the RAW files unless they are important and will use as a back up.
 

piperbarb

Senior Member
I upload my raw files to my laptop, then edit from there. I go through the raw files and delete the ones I don't want to keep. The remainder I leave as raw files for editing later or edit them, save the edited product, and then export to JPG. The files I save are placed in appropriate directories, such as birds, pets, etc. I then back the files up to my file server and an external hard drive.

Why would I upload to another Web site and then edit?
 

Dave_W

The Dude
I keep all my files as RAW files (or more precisely DNG files) and only throw away the files I do not want to keep. You never know when a project will pop up that you'll need your earlier work. And with disc space getting cheaper by the day, backing them up isn't the big deal it was 8 yrs ago.
 

Mfrankfort

Senior Member
Best way to Organize. Lightroom. I store them all on an external hard drive beacuse of the size and ease of portability switching from desktop to laptop, and have Lightroom installed on both computers. It is your one stop shop for editing/organizing. Once I edit them, I will usually save them as JPEG, or TIFF for larger prints, and delete RAW files unless I know I am going to go back and edit them. But if it's just family (especially inlay) pictures, I'll delete the RAW ones I know I won't be editing any further. Everyone is different though. Just my 2 cents.
 

RockyNH_RIP

Senior Member
I keep all my files as RAW files (or more precisely DNG files) and only throw away the files I do not want to keep. You never know when a project will pop up that you'll need your earlier work. And with disc space getting cheaper by the day, backing them up isn't the big deal it was 8 yrs ago.

Dave, I also keep mine... but as NEF.. Curious why you keep DNG??? Thanks

Pat in NH
 

Eye-level

Banned
I've been researching this and apparently the Library of Congress is going to start archiving everything as DNG...I think there is a movement afoot to make DNG a universal archival thing...I guess every different manufacturer has their own RAW format...
 

Michael J.

Senior Member
Maybe I should start taking photos in RAW. I tried many times but not one photo after processing was as I wanted to be. I used LR, Capture NX2, Camera Raw for PS.
 

Dave_W

The Dude
Dave, I also keep mine... but as NEF.. Curious why you keep DNG??? Thanks

Pat in NH

I do it mainly because of the metadata. Metadata exists as a "sidecar" file in the NEF format and because of that the metadata can easily be lost. However, when you convert to a DNG format the metadata is incorporated within the file itself and cannot be lost. Also, a DNG file takes up approximately 20% less space than an NEF file which can really add up with you're talking about 1000's of files.
 

Mabvith

Senior Member
I keep all of my RAW files. To me they are like negatives of old - they are the originals and contain all the info. They get stored on CD or DVD and any 'special' ones are also stored online.
I initially view the RAW files in Irfanview. Any worthy of processing then get imported into Lightroom and after processing I usually export as JPEG.
 

RockyNH_RIP

Senior Member
I do it mainly because of the metadata. Metadata exists as a "sidecar" file in the NEF format and because of that the metadata can easily be lost. However, when you convert to a DNG format the metadata is incorporated within the file itself and cannot be lost. Also, a DNG file takes up approximately 20% less space than an NEF file which can really add up with you're talking about 1000's of files.

Thanks Dave.. I will look into that.. Do you have a batch method for the conversion??

Pat in NH
 

Dave_W

The Dude
Thanks Dave.. I will look into that.. Do you have a batch method for the conversion??

Pat in NH

If you use Lightroom you can set it to convert from NEF to DNG as it's copying them from your camera to your computer. I also think Bridge will do this, too, but I'm not 100% certain.
 

jwstl

Senior Member
Thank you for explaining that process! I'm going to look into Lightroom. I'm assuming its like Dropbox.

​Thanks again!

Lightroom is nothing like Dropbox. Lightroom is an image database, conversion, adjustment application from Adobe while Dropbox is an online storage service.


Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk HD
 

Eye-level

Banned
I do it mainly because of the metadata. Metadata exists as a "sidecar" file in the NEF format and because of that the metadata can easily be lost. However, when you convert to a DNG format the metadata is incorporated within the file itself and cannot be lost. Also, a DNG file takes up approximately 20% less space than an NEF file which can really add up with you're talking about 1000's of files.

OK I understand how the metadata could be lost when working with a NEF (Nikon's version of RAW) file..eg converting to a jpeg might strip it away. What I would like to know is how is it that a DNG file is 20% smaller than a NEF?

Jpeg preview maybe? (which apparently is optional when converting proprietary RAW formats to DNG)

Personally after doing a lot of reading on this subject I think DNG is the way to go the real question becomes what is the best DNG converter to use with any given Nikon camera model.

I think my new motto is going to become I shoot RAW but save DNG.
 
Last edited:

Eye-level

Banned
Adobe (invented DNG format) apparently has a freeware DNG converter BTW however I do not know exactly what all cameras it works with...
 
Top