Raw vs. Jpeg and Adobe .Dng files
Sean Dalton
Lessons
Class Overview
03:30 2The Power of Mobile Editing
04:43 3The Digital Anatomy of a Photograph
01:35 4Class Project
00:28 5Raw vs. Jpeg and Adobe .Dng files
03:06 6Chapter 2: Quiz
Exposure and Emotion
06:00 8Color Theory and Emotion
17:25 9Editing and Storytelling
02:02 10Editing Styles
02:48 11Editing - The Right and the Wrong
01:10 12Finding your Editing Style
04:19 13Chapter 3: Quiz
14The Best Mobile Editing Apps
03:20 15Chapter 4: Quiz
16Lightroom Mobile CC Overview
08:21 17Lightroom Mobile CC Editing Workflow
02:59 18Chapter 5: Quiz
19Importing Photos and Organization
03:15 20Prepping the Photo
02:15 21Editing Exposure and Tone Curve
09:20 22Editing Color
05:29 23Effects and Details
11:33 24Fine-Tuning With Selective Edits
04:25 25Presets and Why You Should Use Them
02:59 26Common Editing Mistakes
04:34 27Chapter 6: Quiz
28Example One - Moody Portrait
07:21 29Example Two - Epic Travel Landscape
05:56 30Example Three - Warm Lifestyle
05:28 31Example Four - Gritty Street Photo
05:38 32How to Become a Better Editor
03:21 33Conclusion
01:39 34Chapter 8: Quiz
35Final Quiz
Lesson Info
Raw vs. Jpeg and Adobe .Dng files
now it's time to talk about something that we hear often is this raw versus jpeg debate, You might have heard this and you might not know the difference between what a raw photo is and a Jpeg photo is. So essentially when you shoot a photo on your camera or even on your smartphone, um there's different file systems that you can use. So jpeg photo is one of the most common photos, probably the most common file format you can use. And essentially a Jpeg photo is a compressed photo. So when you take a picture with your with your camera and you save it as a jpeg, the camera will automatically edit the photo on its own to how it thinks it should look. It'll edit it, it will compress it and that results in a smaller file size and an image that often looks very good outside of camera. Um And then the other side of things is a raw photo and a raw photo is a photo that captures as much data as possible. So when you take a raw image it's capturing as much information as possible and it's not com...
pressing it in any way. Why? That's good is because when you go into editing, you have a lot more flexibility with editing a raw photo, you have a lot more detail on the highlights, a lot more detail in the dark areas and you can really edit the photo to your own liking. When you first look at the photos out of camera, the raw photo might look really gray, really boring, but you can edit that photo to make it look however you want Jpeg photos like I said, they're compressed so there are smaller file size than the large file sizes of the raw photos but they're a little bit more difficult to edit with that said I'm not gonna tell you to shoot raw and I'm not gonna tell you to shoot Jpeg, there's a difference for everybody raw photos, you know, they take up a lot of space on your phone. Um and that can be difficult but the good thing about raw photos is you can edit them in Lightroom Mobile. Actually, Lightroom mobile release an update a few years ago. So you can edit any raw photo in Lightroom Mobile and that's amazing. The fact that you can edit raw photos on your phone. And that was the thing that kind of trans transformed the mobile editing process to actually be legit is when you could edit raw photos on your phone with that said Jpeg photos are totally fine. It just depends. Do you want to spend more time editing and creating a really epic beautiful photo. I would go with raw if you just wanna do some very simple edits and just kind of touch up things like exposure and color Jpeg is fine. You're not gonna see like a massive difference between the two but I didn't want to add this section because I think it is important now with that said if you're a mobile shooter, you should be shooting all of your photos through the Lightroom mobile app. And the reason for that is because Adobe Lightroom Mobile has its own raw file, it's called the DMG file. So you can capture raw photos on your phone, giving you much more flexibility in the editing process, um and allowing you to create edits that have more detail that have more vivid colors and things like that. So I highly recommend if you are shooting on your phone, shoot through the Lightroom mobile app because you can shoot in that adobe DMG raw file, which is amazing in my opinion.