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General Photography
Shooting RAW
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<blockquote data-quote="WhiteLight" data-source="post: 185246" data-attributes="member: 9556"><p>Sorry Michael, but what do you mean by 'Daylight'? Brightness?</p><p>If so, the RAW image stores <em>everything </em>in the scene..</p><p>All levels of colors, brightness etc.</p><p>So when you post process a RAW image you have a lot of information to work with.</p><p></p><p>Not so the case with JPEG.</p><p>The camera chooses the optimum settings for you from the RAW file (not actually, but this is just to make it simpler) & throws away all the information that is not necessary.</p><p>So there is no additional information left for you to adjust & make changes</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="WhiteLight, post: 185246, member: 9556"] Sorry Michael, but what do you mean by 'Daylight'? Brightness? If so, the RAW image stores [I]everything [/I]in the scene.. All levels of colors, brightness etc. So when you post process a RAW image you have a lot of information to work with. Not so the case with JPEG. The camera chooses the optimum settings for you from the RAW file (not actually, but this is just to make it simpler) & throws away all the information that is not necessary. So there is no additional information left for you to adjust & make changes [/QUOTE]
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