1) It does, no question about it. You can correct WB and exposure ( ac
couple of steps to either side) without quality loss in the computer, if
it's RAW. This means you can correct both brigghness and colour without
loosing image quality/information. Especially useful when you want to avoid
burned out highlights or bring out subtle shades. Buy a Phase One LE
license. It's cheap (appr. 100 USD) and you'll never regret it.

Jens



Jens Bladt
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://hjem.get2net.dk/bladt


-----Oprindelig meddelelse-----
Fra: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sendt: 13. marts 2005 07:00
Til: [email protected]
Emne: Re: Best all around RAW converter/manager(s)??


In a message dated 3/12/2005 5:27:16 PM Pacific Standard Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
There's two questions I have for those out there that have worked with RAW
for a while:

1. How do you know that your RAW workflow, assuming one's being used,
consistently produces better results than the in-camera processing would
have produced?
=======
Well, I don't know for sure, but I am pretty sure. And I don't base this on
converters, or having done a lot of photo editing, or anything else but my
experience in using both PaintShop Pro's PSP files and Photoshop's PSD
files. I've
done a fair amount of graphic drawing/painting in the past and what I found
was that jpegs degrade with each save. So I worked with PSP files only (now
PSD
files) which do NOT degrade at all. You can edit and save and edit and save
and go back and they still look good. If you try that on a jpeg you can
literally, I mean literally, see it degrade each time. For web pages, I
would turn a
finalized version of a PSP/PSD file into a jpeg (while still having the
PSD/PSD file saved).

Ergo, RAW to PSD or PSP -- no information loss. Simply the best way to go
for
the very best images, IF you do a lot of post processing or even ANY post
processing. If not, then you don't need it.

HTH, Marnie


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