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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D600/D610
JPEG vs RAW
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<blockquote data-quote="BackdoorArts" data-source="post: 126079" data-attributes="member: 9240"><p>What are you viewing the RAW files in? As John says the RAW file has all the information from the sensor, which can then be adjusted as you like. A program light Adobe Lightroom has various camera profiles available to it, including those used by the D600, at the bottom of the Develop panel. If you set the profile to Camera Standard it should look pretty darn close to what the JPG looks like shot in Standard mode on the D600 (if you shoot in Vivid, choose Vivid). Adobe Camera RAW has this feature as well if you're using Elements or Photoshop. Shooting in RAW has the advantage of allowing you to apply any of these profiles to the image data after the fact. So, if you see the jpeg and say, "Darn, I wish I'd used the Vivid profile!!", with the RAW file you can just choose that one and now you did.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="BackdoorArts, post: 126079, member: 9240"] What are you viewing the RAW files in? As John says the RAW file has all the information from the sensor, which can then be adjusted as you like. A program light Adobe Lightroom has various camera profiles available to it, including those used by the D600, at the bottom of the Develop panel. If you set the profile to Camera Standard it should look pretty darn close to what the JPG looks like shot in Standard mode on the D600 (if you shoot in Vivid, choose Vivid). Adobe Camera RAW has this feature as well if you're using Elements or Photoshop. Shooting in RAW has the advantage of allowing you to apply any of these profiles to the image data after the fact. So, if you see the jpeg and say, "Darn, I wish I'd used the Vivid profile!!", with the RAW file you can just choose that one and now you did. [/QUOTE]
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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D600/D610
JPEG vs RAW
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