Assignment #7 JPEG/RAW
Shooting images RAW and editing in Photoshop 5 RAW images edited - 5 Screenshots of the edits, 5 TIFF images (after edits with Photoshop) - Total 10 images
Take a slice of an the whole image your viewer should be intrigued by the image, light and shadow should play a large role within the image. Take 5 different subject shot using RAW file format and edited (photoshop) save them as TIFF files (5 Images). Once you have finished editing your image take a screenshot (command+shift+3) 5 screenshot images. Canon RAW files are saved as .CR2 while Nikon files are saved as .NEF or .NRW. Two different file types JPEG and RAW.
Take a slice of an the whole image your viewer should be intrigued by the image, light and shadow should play a large role within the image. Take 5 different subject shot using RAW file format and edited (photoshop) save them as TIFF files (5 Images). Once you have finished editing your image take a screenshot (command+shift+3) 5 screenshot images. Canon RAW files are saved as .CR2 while Nikon files are saved as .NEF or .NRW. Two different file types JPEG and RAW.
iPhoto - Load images to iPhoto to edit them in photoshop the images need to be exported from iPhoto so the images stay as CR2. From iPhoto select FILE, then EXPORT, under KIND selectORIGINAL and export images.
JPEG – JPEG stands for "Joint Photographic Expert Group" files are processed right within the camera. How exactly they are processed varies from model to model. While color temperature and exposure are set based on your camera settings when the image is shot, the camera will also process the image to add blacks, contrast, brightness, noise reduction, sharpening (which you can see in the example above) and then render the file to a compressed JPEG. These files are finished and can be viewed and printed immediately after shot.
RAW – RAW (unprocessed - and therefore raw) files are uncompressed and unprocessed snapshots of all of the detail available to the camera sensor. Because RAW files are unprocessed, they come out looking flat and dark. RAW images need to be viewed and processed using your camera’s software or in more robust commonly used software like Adobe Photoshop, Lightroom, Aperture, etc prior to being ready for display or print.
TIFF - TIFF stands for "Tagged Image File Format" and is a standard in the printing and publishing industry. TIFF files are significantly larger than their JPEG counterparts, and can be either uncompressed or compressed using lossless compression. Unlike JPEG, TIFF files can have a bit depth of either 16-bits per channel or 8-bits per channel, and multiple layered images can be stored in a single TIFF file. TIFF files are an excellent option for archiving intermediate files which you may edit later, since it introduces no compression artifacts.
JPEG – JPEG stands for "Joint Photographic Expert Group" files are processed right within the camera. How exactly they are processed varies from model to model. While color temperature and exposure are set based on your camera settings when the image is shot, the camera will also process the image to add blacks, contrast, brightness, noise reduction, sharpening (which you can see in the example above) and then render the file to a compressed JPEG. These files are finished and can be viewed and printed immediately after shot.
RAW – RAW (unprocessed - and therefore raw) files are uncompressed and unprocessed snapshots of all of the detail available to the camera sensor. Because RAW files are unprocessed, they come out looking flat and dark. RAW images need to be viewed and processed using your camera’s software or in more robust commonly used software like Adobe Photoshop, Lightroom, Aperture, etc prior to being ready for display or print.
TIFF - TIFF stands for "Tagged Image File Format" and is a standard in the printing and publishing industry. TIFF files are significantly larger than their JPEG counterparts, and can be either uncompressed or compressed using lossless compression. Unlike JPEG, TIFF files can have a bit depth of either 16-bits per channel or 8-bits per channel, and multiple layered images can be stored in a single TIFF file. TIFF files are an excellent option for archiving intermediate files which you may edit later, since it introduces no compression artifacts.