I think that may be the case if you shoot jpegs or tiffs in a dslr. However, 
when shooting RAW you have more control over the shadows and highlights in 
conversion. Of course, highlights that are totally burned out can't be 
recovered, but those that are just within range can be pulled back and shadows 
can be pulled up a bit or intensified. I'm no techy, and I don't understand all 
of what's happening here, but I can tell that it works. To me, shooting RAW 
with a digital is comparable to doing your own BW processing and exposure. It 
gives you a lot of control options. And of course it's a lot of fun.


> Hmmm ... seems that there are/were a lot of people claiming that a DSLR
> generally falls into the range of slide film, which is a couple of stops or
> so less than color negative film.  Has that changed recently?
> 
> Shel 
> 
> 
> > From: "Shel Belinkoff"
> > Subject: Re: *ist DS versus *ist D for the "Digital Newbie"
> 
> > > Was thinking about that while out walking this morning.  Since 
> > > color neg has greater latitude than a digi, it would seem that 
> > > color film might be a better choice in contrasty situations.  
> > > Am I off base here?
> 
> > [Original Message]
> > From: William Robb <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> 
> > The jury is kind of out on that one. I don't think there is all that 
> > much difference in latitude between the two.
> 
> 

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