Which result do you prefer actually? Personally, I prefer the JPGs'. Somehow, there seems to have some colour hue which differs very much from what you see in PS vs other viewers.
Oh, and as always, thank you very much for organising the outing!
I prefer to PP the RAW images because it's allow you to tweak or edit the photo without any loss of quality to the image itself.
If the raw file is subjected to some extra adjustments in post-processing to improve the shot, that doesn't mean that JPEG shooting is worse, it just means that more care has been taken over the post processing.
I understand, and that's my preference too, but I believe your images would look much better if there isn't any 'discolouration' after saving in PS. It's something to do with the Color Profile.
Have you compared the images you've posted here, against when opened in PS? I'm not sure about Canon, but for my Nikon, there's a huge difference.
A straight forward test would be, just open the RAW file in PS. It should look almost the same as the JPG in colour etc. Save the RAW as JPG without making any amendment. Now, use another viewer to view the original JPG and the saved JPG, which you should notice the colour difference.
I'm not sure about you, but personally, I dislike the JPG saved from RAW in PS, in terms of the colour.
hiho2, thanks for viewing. I was looking for spiders on tree bark but end up with #5 lol. #3, the pair was there when I saw it. waiter as in wait for them ? They were very hungry and eating away lol
hiho2, thanks for viewing. I was looking for spiders on tree bark but end up with #5 lol. #3, the pair was there when I saw it. waiter as in wait for them ? They were very hungry and eating away lol
Thanks ultrazoom... it's just a matter of practice and lots and lots of patience...
As they say "practice makes perfect".... But I'm not saying i'm already perfect coz I see a lot of room for improvement on my shots. But practice will surely help to improve especially on making your hands steady, know which settings to apply on different subject/ambient light condition and composition....