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Do you shoot "Raw" or "Jpeg"
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<blockquote data-quote="Browncoat" data-source="post: 378691" data-attributes="member: 1061"><p>I also believe a lot of the so-called snobbery is merely just a perception issue. Yeah, there is certainly some unwarranted browbeating out there, but there are also a lot of people who get their dander up over nothing. I think most of us could care less. We don't care what camera you have, what mode it's in, if you have the full Adobe suite or Elements, or any of that. All we care about is the final image. It doesn't matter how you get there.</p><p></p><p>In regards to my chimp comment, that's how <span style="color: #ff0000"><em><strong>I feel for me and my photography</strong></em></span>. It doesn't mean that I think everyone who shoots in JPEG is a dolt with no vision. </p><p></p><p>Frankly, I don't care about what anyone else does with their photography. Yes, I enjoy the work of others. Yes, I will ask questions and form opinions, likes and dislikes. Yes, I even enjoy reading about the process of others. But at the end of the day, it has no bearing on what I do...for me. What others do doesn't factor into my thought process when my eye is to the viewfinder. </p><p></p><p>If one day I'm standing in front of the Grand Canyon (which is on my Bucket List), it's probably the only time in my life I'll ever get to be there. I'm going to want some photos. On that day, I'm not using JPEG. That doesn't even factor into the equation. In my mind, for me, if I want to produce something memorable, it's gotta be RAW. Otherwise, I'm no different than the guy next to me with his iPhone. In my mind, for me, we're taking the same photograph, and I don't want that. Not for the Grand Canyon.</p><p></p><p>Am I going to snicker and snort at that guy because he's using an iPhone? Or the other guy with a D5100 shooting JPEG? Or the other guy with Canon? No. <em>Okay, I'd probably snicker and snort at the Canon guy</em>. But the point is, whatever photograph they're making is theirs. </p><p></p><p>What's more, I think most people probably think this way. That when we share our opinions, it's our own inner voice. It's what we tell ourselves. I seriously doubt that anyone in the history of...ever...has legitimate concerns over how the other guy shoots. That's why these versus threads never end well, because someone inevitably takes an opinion out of context and makes it personal. These versus threads are basically us speaking to ourselves, expressing how we feel.</p><p></p><p>It's never about saying what you do is wrong, or sucks.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Browncoat, post: 378691, member: 1061"] I also believe a lot of the so-called snobbery is merely just a perception issue. Yeah, there is certainly some unwarranted browbeating out there, but there are also a lot of people who get their dander up over nothing. I think most of us could care less. We don't care what camera you have, what mode it's in, if you have the full Adobe suite or Elements, or any of that. All we care about is the final image. It doesn't matter how you get there. In regards to my chimp comment, that's how [COLOR=#ff0000][I][B]I feel for me and my photography[/B][/I][/COLOR]. It doesn't mean that I think everyone who shoots in JPEG is a dolt with no vision. Frankly, I don't care about what anyone else does with their photography. Yes, I enjoy the work of others. Yes, I will ask questions and form opinions, likes and dislikes. Yes, I even enjoy reading about the process of others. But at the end of the day, it has no bearing on what I do...for me. What others do doesn't factor into my thought process when my eye is to the viewfinder. If one day I'm standing in front of the Grand Canyon (which is on my Bucket List), it's probably the only time in my life I'll ever get to be there. I'm going to want some photos. On that day, I'm not using JPEG. That doesn't even factor into the equation. In my mind, for me, if I want to produce something memorable, it's gotta be RAW. Otherwise, I'm no different than the guy next to me with his iPhone. In my mind, for me, we're taking the same photograph, and I don't want that. Not for the Grand Canyon. Am I going to snicker and snort at that guy because he's using an iPhone? Or the other guy with a D5100 shooting JPEG? Or the other guy with Canon? No. [I]Okay, I'd probably snicker and snort at the Canon guy[/I]. But the point is, whatever photograph they're making is theirs. What's more, I think most people probably think this way. That when we share our opinions, it's our own inner voice. It's what we tell ourselves. I seriously doubt that anyone in the history of...ever...has legitimate concerns over how the other guy shoots. That's why these versus threads never end well, because someone inevitably takes an opinion out of context and makes it personal. These versus threads are basically us speaking to ourselves, expressing how we feel. It's never about saying what you do is wrong, or sucks. [/QUOTE]
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