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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D7000
Raw beginner, forgive me!
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<blockquote data-quote="rocky" data-source="post: 40942" data-attributes="member: 8292"><p>The owners manual really is well written. Also, if you come to a menu setting you're not sure about, push that button with the question mark on it. It explains the setting. </p><p>I used to get frustrated with the camera presets for jpeg shots, especially if I forgot to re-adjust for new shooting conditions. The solution? Shoot RAW. You can make all the adjustments at your computer, at your leisure, and the best part is that you can re-adjust the images in the future from the raw file at no loss of quality. When you shoot jpeg, you begin with only 25% of the original image to work with, and lose quality from there. with raw you start at 100% and can always use that as the starting point. And adjusting the images in raw will teach you to truly understand what each adjustment is and how to use it to improve any image.</p><p>The only thing you can't adjust in raw is ISO.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="rocky, post: 40942, member: 8292"] The owners manual really is well written. Also, if you come to a menu setting you're not sure about, push that button with the question mark on it. It explains the setting. I used to get frustrated with the camera presets for jpeg shots, especially if I forgot to re-adjust for new shooting conditions. The solution? Shoot RAW. You can make all the adjustments at your computer, at your leisure, and the best part is that you can re-adjust the images in the future from the raw file at no loss of quality. When you shoot jpeg, you begin with only 25% of the original image to work with, and lose quality from there. with raw you start at 100% and can always use that as the starting point. And adjusting the images in raw will teach you to truly understand what each adjustment is and how to use it to improve any image. The only thing you can't adjust in raw is ISO. [/QUOTE]
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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D7000
Raw beginner, forgive me!
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