In a message dated 12/29/2005 9:16:15 AM Pacific Standard Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Your page wouldn't come up. But in general, when shooting RAW you should 
expose to preserve your highlights right at the limit. When processing 
in the PSCS RAW converter, adjust the highlight level with exposure 
slider, then bring your midtones back up to where you want them with the 
brightness slider and adjust the black with the shadow slider. Don't 
expect a RAW to look good right out of the camera.

Paul
=======
Good advice that Paul has given.

At least, in my experience. And I am not the most experienced here by a long 
shot. But here is my inexperienced experienced .02 cents...

Shooting RAW, yes, means more post processing, but on the whole it also means 
one can make photos actually better. It really gives one a great deal of 
control over how they turn out. And the latitude is somewhat similar to slide 
film, so don't expect things you can't have (you still might have to use a ND 
filter in some situations as someone mentioned). Except for the fact that post 
processing can improve the latitude -- in a sense.

Digital has some advantage over film, and RAW has some advantages over JPEG. 
But digital and RAW are still not magical. It's still photography and there 
are still limitations.

However, a lot of limitations can be dealt with with post processing. If 
you'd play with them a bit, your photos will be fine.

Marnie aka Doe 

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