Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2011/08/14
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]On Aug 14, 2011, at 3:14 AM, Herbert Kanner wrote: > And, I'm convinced that there are occasions when there are adjustments > that can be made in Lightroom or Aperture to raw that cannot be made, or > at least made as well, to jpegs. Certainly that has been emphasized in > more than one book on Lightroom. Herb, I agree, and I suspect, based on my own recent experience, that the range of adjustments that can be made in Lightroom (haven't used Aperture), is much wider than most of us take advantage of. (I'm really speaking only for myself, obviously.) As I may have mentioned in one of my posts over the past week or so, while on leave this summer, I had scheduled a one-on-one tutorial with a professional photog instructor and photographer and designer. She calls herself a "Lightroom Evangelist," and I was amazed at what I learned from her in just a few hours. More to your point, she demonstrated on a number of my raw images the very wide range of useful adjustments that can be made in LR, and I would emphasize "useful." We were working with both M9 and 7D raw files. Even more to the point of white balance, she pointed out what most of us have learned, that reds and greens are highly saturated in raw files and almost always require adjustment in LR, Aperture, PS, etc. That saturation CAN be compensated for with in-camera settings, but her advice was to keep the shooting settings as simple as possible, "always" shoot on manual, adjust ISO, aperture, and shutter speed on the fly, just as you would do with a manual film camera, except for ISO, of course, and adjust later in LR. (This was her advice for photographers who have a good working knowledge of shooting film AND darkroom work. She does not recommend this for beginners in digital photography.) She suggested this precisely because raw files contain so much color data, much of which is never accessed or even accessible with current image processing and display technology, on the popular level. All this is not advice, just my own experience. :-) As to the voltage question, I remain mute! :-) Ken --------------------------- Kenneth Frazier kennybod at me.com kennybod at mac.com