Markus Maurer wrote:
> Hi Kenneth
> I was a gross misunderstanding on my side of the raw processing bypassing
> all of these settings.
> Have a little patience with somebody coming from old film cameras ;-)
> 
> I will shoot raw only and on my second day in the all digital world I'm busy
> reading tutorials about the different raw converters at the moment :-)
> greetings
> Markus
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of
> Kenneth Waller
> Sent: Thursday, March 08, 2007 5:36 PM
> To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List
> Subject: Re: Saturation/Sharpness/Contrast settings at "Natural" in K10D
> 
> 
>> What are your experiences with the settings for saturation, sharpness and
>> contrast so far?
> I've left them all @ default.
> 
> You have much better control in PS.
> 
> 
> Kenneth Waller
> 
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Markus Maurer" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> 
> Subject: Saturation/Sharpness/Contrast settings at "Natural" in K10D
> 
> 
>> Hi K10D users
>>
>> What are your experiences with the settings for saturation, sharpness and
>> contrast so far?
>> Can I just leave them at the default natural setting or would I even get
>> better results lowering for ex. in camera sharpening (and/or
>> saturation/contrast) and doing that as the last step in Photoshop after
>> all
>> other adjustments? I prefer natural, not oversaturated and oversharpened
>> photos, that's why I ask :-)
>>
>> Just got the camera yesterday and had not enough time for experiments
>> beside
>> flashing with the AF280T....
>>

If this is your second day in the digital realm, shoot JPEG's for awhile 
until you have time to get used to the camera.  ...at least that's my 
recommendation.  There's plenty of time later to further refine and 
improve your results by shifting over to RAW, but at first, KISS. ;)

Of course, since you're using the K10D, shoot in RAW+ mode (RAW & JPEG). 
  It'll gobble up you memory faster, but you will have the immediate 
satisfaction of the JPEG's, and the long-term highly editable RAW's to 
play with when you feel ready.  Plus, if you shoot jpeg, all those 
settings (saturation, contrast, sharpness, white balance) will be 
meaningful, and you'll learn to use them better so that your RAW's also 
start coming "out of the camera" with the proper meta-data settings to 
minimize post-processing time.


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