GrillMouster
Mouster of the Grill
- Joined
- Dec 13, 2005
- Messages
- 1,236
The RAW file contains the light value recorded by each and every photosite. JPG compresses by throwing away some of that information and replacing it with an average color.
For example, within a little 4x4 pixel patch of blue sky each pixel may register a slightly different shade of blue. The RAW file stores all of that data. When the jpg is created, looks at that 4x4 patch, determines that the eye probably won't discern all four colors and averages them to one or two unique shades of blue. So, while both the RAW and the JPG are using 4x4 pixels, only the RAW knows the original values of each pixel; the jpg changed them. Now multiply that across all the 4x4 swatches throughout the image an that's a lot of original data that is thrown out. To the human eye it looks the same, but the extra data is gone. When you process the JPG you're making adjustments based on the alterations that were made when the compressed JPG was created.
If the image was a grid of pixels, with letters on one axis and numbers on the other axis, (ala the battleship game), then the RAW file stores data as such:
Cell A1 = dark blue
Cell B1 = darker blue
Cell A2 = medium blue
Cell B2 = light blue
If you zoomed in so you could see the individual pixels that's what you'd see. However, when you zoom out those pixels blend together somewhat to the eye, and we see it just as a medium blue. So...jpg would describe the scene as:
Cells A1 & B2 = medium blue.
Cells A2 & B1 = dark blue
So, when you process the jpg it's only going to look at medium blue and dark blue when it interpolates new colors for that area. But when you process the RAW file it has all of the original colors that were in the image and, therefore, has more information to use for interpolation. This means you'll get smoother gradients.
As has been said over and over (and over) it won't matter for mild adjustments; jpgs have enough information for that. But when you get to a couple of stops over or under they start to break up. To replace that damage you need to do other stuff, which is essentially digital painting; you're no longer processing the original data.
As for what's beyond photo processing you misunderstand. I wasn't trying to say that it's wrong to do extra stuff to a photo. I wasn't arguing that heavily processing an image makes it no longer a photograph. I was pointing out that for the purpose of this discussion we're talking about how much original data is contained in the files and how much of it is available for processing, not what extra stuff that wasn't in the original file that can be added to it.
For example, within a little 4x4 pixel patch of blue sky each pixel may register a slightly different shade of blue. The RAW file stores all of that data. When the jpg is created, looks at that 4x4 patch, determines that the eye probably won't discern all four colors and averages them to one or two unique shades of blue. So, while both the RAW and the JPG are using 4x4 pixels, only the RAW knows the original values of each pixel; the jpg changed them. Now multiply that across all the 4x4 swatches throughout the image an that's a lot of original data that is thrown out. To the human eye it looks the same, but the extra data is gone. When you process the JPG you're making adjustments based on the alterations that were made when the compressed JPG was created.
If the image was a grid of pixels, with letters on one axis and numbers on the other axis, (ala the battleship game), then the RAW file stores data as such:
Cell A1 = dark blue
Cell B1 = darker blue
Cell A2 = medium blue
Cell B2 = light blue
If you zoomed in so you could see the individual pixels that's what you'd see. However, when you zoom out those pixels blend together somewhat to the eye, and we see it just as a medium blue. So...jpg would describe the scene as:
Cells A1 & B2 = medium blue.
Cells A2 & B1 = dark blue
So, when you process the jpg it's only going to look at medium blue and dark blue when it interpolates new colors for that area. But when you process the RAW file it has all of the original colors that were in the image and, therefore, has more information to use for interpolation. This means you'll get smoother gradients.
As has been said over and over (and over) it won't matter for mild adjustments; jpgs have enough information for that. But when you get to a couple of stops over or under they start to break up. To replace that damage you need to do other stuff, which is essentially digital painting; you're no longer processing the original data.
As for what's beyond photo processing you misunderstand. I wasn't trying to say that it's wrong to do extra stuff to a photo. I wasn't arguing that heavily processing an image makes it no longer a photograph. I was pointing out that for the purpose of this discussion we're talking about how much original data is contained in the files and how much of it is available for processing, not what extra stuff that wasn't in the original file that can be added to it.
