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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D600/D610
White Balance 'Magic Wand' Needed!
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<blockquote data-quote="hark" data-source="post: 126209" data-attributes="member: 13196"><p>I'm old school in that I remember the days when photographers would choose a specific film to yield the types of color/grain/contrast that they were after as well as using filters on the fronts of their lenses. They did all this so the processed image had everything tweaked in camera. Back then they didn't have much of any computer software as personal computers weren't too common. To me, shooting jpegs offers the same type of style where many photographers aim to capture as much artistic information within the photos during the shoot rather than relying on post editing. </p><p></p><p>Both jpegs and RAW have their benefits, and each person needs to decide which format works best for a specific situation.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="hark, post: 126209, member: 13196"] I'm old school in that I remember the days when photographers would choose a specific film to yield the types of color/grain/contrast that they were after as well as using filters on the fronts of their lenses. They did all this so the processed image had everything tweaked in camera. Back then they didn't have much of any computer software as personal computers weren't too common. To me, shooting jpegs offers the same type of style where many photographers aim to capture as much artistic information within the photos during the shoot rather than relying on post editing. Both jpegs and RAW have their benefits, and each person needs to decide which format works best for a specific situation. [/QUOTE]
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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D600/D610
White Balance 'Magic Wand' Needed!
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