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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D7000
in camera sharpening
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<blockquote data-quote="Horoscope Fish" data-source="post: 153388" data-attributes="member: 13090"><p>Well if you're shooting JPG I would be forced to assume "data loss" isn't your primary concern... But to answer your question there is no additional data loss from using in-camera sharpening that I can see.</p><p></p><p></p><p>I guess you could argue that point but the simple fact is, in my experience with a Nikon D40, a Nikon D5100 and now a Nikon D7100, the images were soft at the factory default setting. Increasing the in-camera Sharpness setting improved things dramatically when shooing JPG. And for me the whole point of shooting JPG in the first place is to avoid doing post processing. In actuality I shoot RAW + JPG because I just can't bring myself to work with .JPG files but some people are impatient so I give them JPG's and keep RAW files archived.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Horoscope Fish, post: 153388, member: 13090"] Well if you're shooting JPG I would be forced to assume "data loss" isn't your primary concern... But to answer your question there is no additional data loss from using in-camera sharpening that I can see. I guess you could argue that point but the simple fact is, in my experience with a Nikon D40, a Nikon D5100 and now a Nikon D7100, the images were soft at the factory default setting. Increasing the in-camera Sharpness setting improved things dramatically when shooing JPG. And for me the whole point of shooting JPG in the first place is to avoid doing post processing. In actuality I shoot RAW + JPG because I just can't bring myself to work with .JPG files but some people are impatient so I give them JPG's and keep RAW files archived. [/QUOTE]
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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D7000
in camera sharpening
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