1. but that isn't neccessarily the best choice for everyone, some people, simply don't want to do the post processing, nor have the software to do it, I think sometimes it's easy for people to get caught up in things and forget that not everyone on here is a pro or advanced amateur, some people would simply like to understand white balance so they can set it and hopefully get the best shot possible without having to post process.
Anyone who has a camera that can shoot raw has the software to convert raw.
Anyone who's concerned about white balance and can shoot raw would be well served to shoot raw, rather than worrying themselves when shooting about white balance and possibly picking the wrong one, leaving them with a substandard jpg.
Raw doesn't have to be for the advanced shooter, part of what we're trying to do here is remove some of the fear that some people might have of shooting raw. If you're advanced enough to use a DSLR, you're advanced enough to handle raw. Neither is really all that incomprehensible.
I wasn't saying anyone was wrong for wanting to shoot raw, I was making the point for those people who don't want to shoot raw and have to do the conversion/processing, I think it is wrong to make them feel that they are wrong for not wanting to spend as much time working on pics as some people do..
Actually, you're on the wrong side of this one - I
don't want to spend time, that's one of the reasons I shoot raw - so I can take the photo much faster than someone who's mucking about changing their WB settings. (No matter how easy your camera makes it, it's still a bother.) I only have limited time to take any photo, but I have unlimited time to adjust WB later -
if I've shot in Raw mode.
If you're advanced enough to be shooting hundreds of photos at a shot, you probably should be using something like Lightroom that can quickly and easy handle those hundreds of Raw photos without having to convert them all, and which can also easily apply custom WB settings to hundreds of photos in seconds. Even if you don't use Lightroom, I would think that any bundled software will give you the ability to look at the raw photos without converting them. If THAT doesn't, use a halfway-decent photo viewing like Irfanview which can display Raw photos along with the usual formats, no conversion needed.
SharowLowe said:
I was thinking of posting an off-color portrait and asking people to "correct" it to see if someone could come up with the right skin tones but that would start another debate.
Obviously you'd need to post a Raw file, which is a pretty big file for such a challenge, too.
