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General Photography
GRAPHIC: Why you should shoot in RAW
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<blockquote data-quote="ohkphoto" data-source="post: 29735" data-attributes="member: 1573"><p>I can attest to that first hand. I recently opened a jpeg (that I had exported from LR about a year ago) and discovered "destroyed pixels" --the picture was worthless.totally unusable and unfixable. Because I have my raw files (in duplicate), I simply re-exported the photo and had a nice clean copy.</p><p></p><p>I forgot to add that I had not even been opening that photo that much. I've also had this happen to jpeg's that I stored on a CD and never opened. About a year later, when I checked it, same thing, damaged pixels. For that reason I don't save jpeg's to a CD.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="ohkphoto, post: 29735, member: 1573"] I can attest to that first hand. I recently opened a jpeg (that I had exported from LR about a year ago) and discovered "destroyed pixels" --the picture was worthless.totally unusable and unfixable. Because I have my raw files (in duplicate), I simply re-exported the photo and had a nice clean copy. I forgot to add that I had not even been opening that photo that much. I've also had this happen to jpeg's that I stored on a CD and never opened. About a year later, when I checked it, same thing, damaged pixels. For that reason I don't save jpeg's to a CD. [/QUOTE]
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GRAPHIC: Why you should shoot in RAW
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