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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D750
Your jpeg settings
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<blockquote data-quote="Samo" data-source="post: 596039" data-attributes="member: 42955"><p>You have to watch just plugging in rote values for sharpening, contrast, saturation, etc for jpegs because different situations cause different results sometimes not really very good. An example would be sometimes +7 on sharpness would be to sharp. Try shooting some raw + jpeg of a subject, compare to each other, and play with the sliders on the raw file then compare. Realize I am talking specifically about sharpness contrast saturation etc not picture modes white balance and what not.</p><p></p><p>I used to shoot jpegs and followed Rockwells dogma in rote settings. When I started messing with raw files I discovered that sometimes stuff would be over sharpened or over saturated or under saturated. This is the problem with jpegs. Different situations sometimes require different tweaking. Why anyone wouldn't shoot raw is sort of strange when processing them quickly is really no big deal.</p><p></p><p>It sounds like an advanced concept and it is but it is not very difficult to understand after you do some comparison study.</p><p></p><p>Having to shoot pegs in order to get shots to customers quickly is a commonly held misconception if you ask me. If you can get beyond that you are working on a more advanced level.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Samo, post: 596039, member: 42955"] You have to watch just plugging in rote values for sharpening, contrast, saturation, etc for jpegs because different situations cause different results sometimes not really very good. An example would be sometimes +7 on sharpness would be to sharp. Try shooting some raw + jpeg of a subject, compare to each other, and play with the sliders on the raw file then compare. Realize I am talking specifically about sharpness contrast saturation etc not picture modes white balance and what not. I used to shoot jpegs and followed Rockwells dogma in rote settings. When I started messing with raw files I discovered that sometimes stuff would be over sharpened or over saturated or under saturated. This is the problem with jpegs. Different situations sometimes require different tweaking. Why anyone wouldn't shoot raw is sort of strange when processing them quickly is really no big deal. It sounds like an advanced concept and it is but it is not very difficult to understand after you do some comparison study. Having to shoot pegs in order to get shots to customers quickly is a commonly held misconception if you ask me. If you can get beyond that you are working on a more advanced level. [/QUOTE]
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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D750
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