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Photography Q&A
RAW v Jpeg - View NX-D problem?
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<blockquote data-quote="Horoscope Fish" data-source="post: 522303" data-attributes="member: 13090"><p>I have to agree with the suggestion to look into using Photoshop Elements. If you're going to shoot RAW, and get even semi-serious about processing photos, you're probably going to wind up using Adobe products eventually so you may as well start learning the lingo and, more importantly if you ask me, the common interface that drives most all Adobe digital editing software. </p><p></p><p>Elements will also give you an enormous amount of control over your black and white processing. It's not the, "mutts nuts" as you put it, but it will put you leaps and bounds ahead of where you are now with your B&W processing. As 480sparky points out, good B&W processing is much, MUCH more than simply desaturating a color image. Besides, Elements is cheap.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Horoscope Fish, post: 522303, member: 13090"] I have to agree with the suggestion to look into using Photoshop Elements. If you're going to shoot RAW, and get even semi-serious about processing photos, you're probably going to wind up using Adobe products eventually so you may as well start learning the lingo and, more importantly if you ask me, the common interface that drives most all Adobe digital editing software. Elements will also give you an enormous amount of control over your black and white processing. It's not the, "mutts nuts" as you put it, but it will put you leaps and bounds ahead of where you are now with your B&W processing. As 480sparky points out, good B&W processing is much, MUCH more than simply desaturating a color image. Besides, Elements is cheap. [/QUOTE]
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RAW v Jpeg - View NX-D problem?
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