Storage is down to about $25/terabyte IN CALIFORNIA ... it's not that cheap and
it's not that easy to get in some other parts of the world
"Get it right in camera" still takes the least storage and is the easiest way to
deal with images in post processing.
Why rely on being able to "rescue" an improperly exposed image in post if you
don't have to?
On 3/11/2020 13:15:41, [email protected] wrote:
Storage is down to about $25 per terabyte, storage isn't much of a problem
On March 11, 2020 10:01:51 AM PDT, Alan C <[email protected]> wrote:
If you shoot RAW, much more tonal data is preserved. Nothing is
clipped.
Incorrectly exposed images can usually be brought up in PP. In fact
you
do edit the unwanted images on the camera. If you shoot RAW, there is
only one image to edit, albeit on the computer. I agree that if you
discard the unwanted imaged in the camera there won't be a storage
problem. If you use a K1, the stored images are huge compared to a K5.
Alan C
On 11-Mar-20 03:32 PM, Dale H. Cook wrote:
On 3/11/2020 5:54 AM, Alan C wrote:
Everything you say is probably quite true but I find it is easy
enough to do any corrections at the PP stage so I don't get too
carried away with the technicalities.
PP cannot correct clipping - once data is clipped it is gone.
Bracketing everything is a solution but it must shorten the life of
the camera & triples the editing process, not to mention the storage
space needed.
Storage is cheap compared to glass. I do fine with 64 gb because I
very seldom shoot video. Bracketing does not require more editing -
after shooting I look at the BW and color histograms in the camera
and
keep only the best (and not clipped) images.
I try to do as little as possible in post - I prefer to get the best
image in camera.
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