![]() Tracy Brewer |
Saving Photos from a Digital Camera I just purchased my first digital camera (Canon Rebel Digital). My question is what is the best way to save my photos to a CD and still keep the quality that they have on my camera?
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Vince Broesch |
The most data is in the RAW, but a TIFF would be fine for most people. Be careful with those neat, small JPG files, because the price of that small file is data lost forever. www.PhotoAgo.com
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Michael Kaplan |
Vince is right. If you shoot RAW like I do, I always keep the RAW file as that is the data directly from the CMOS sensor of the camera. No matter what I do I know I always can start again with the original shot. I will give you my workflow as maybe that will help you. I first sort through the pictures using a great freeware program called Pixort. I then convert all the good ones from RAW to TIFF. Tiff is a lossless format and the RAW will make an 18MB TIF file if you are in 8bit mode or a 32MB file if you are working in 16Bit mode (Photoshop CS). 8 is all you really need as that is what you will end up with anyway. I then do any editing or cropping and save the final in JPG. I keep ALL the files, backing up the RAW to DVD first and later backing up all the other versions. While I'm giving out some great freeware solutions to the workflow, I will add another program, JAlbum. Neatimage has a freeware version for reducing noise.
Most importantly, enjoy actually using your new camera and keep taking photos.
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- Greg McCroskery![]() Contact Greg McCroskery Greg McCroskery's Gallery |
Tracy: All the above info is good stuff! A couple added notes. Always save your JPG print files at the highest- quality setting your editing program allows. Never re-save an original JPG - keep the original as a back-up/source file. Be very careful about the brands of CDs you use to save files. Many cheap brands use dyes that can deteriorate in just a few years. God Bless, Greg
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Marc Apfelstadt |
Per Greg's thoughts... actually, since JPG is a "lossy" format (loses data with each save), I always save JPG as TIF, PSD (photoshop), PNG or another loss-less format. Personally, I take shots with JPG at highest resolution for now in my Digital Rebel, and it seems to capture enough detail. Once it's in the computer, though, leave JPG and "never return." BTW, it's useful to have duplicate or triplicate CDs of crucial images, and to replicate/replace them every year. You could also sign up for a Google mail acct and save up to 1 GB there by mailing to yourself ! Cheers, m.
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