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Sharpen jpgs in camera, or not?
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<blockquote data-quote="Don Kuykendall_RIP" data-source="post: 260449" data-attributes="member: 6277"><p>Because he needs the FPS that you can only get with JPEG</p><p></p><p>I would still increase the Sharpening in the camera. Nikons are set very low from the factory. Play with it and do some test on your own to see what you think is an acceptable level and go with it. I did a time lapse a while back and due to the large number of frames I shot JPEG because it was going to be impossible to edit each shot or to even do a bulk edit because I shot 6,000 frames. </p><p></p><p>JPEG can be good in certain cases.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Don Kuykendall_RIP, post: 260449, member: 6277"] Because he needs the FPS that you can only get with JPEG I would still increase the Sharpening in the camera. Nikons are set very low from the factory. Play with it and do some test on your own to see what you think is an acceptable level and go with it. I did a time lapse a while back and due to the large number of frames I shot JPEG because it was going to be impossible to edit each shot or to even do a bulk edit because I shot 6,000 frames. JPEG can be good in certain cases. [/QUOTE]
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Sharpen jpgs in camera, or not?
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