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EOS RP Is RAW+JPG standard in A mode?

AndyInAnnapolis
Apprentice

Had my RP for about a year and have been using it in A mode.  Just learning about RAW mode and DPP.  If I stay in A mode do I get both a JPG and RAW image for each picture?  JPGs are usually find for most pics but would like the option of editing the RAW image for those shots which I'd like to edit/blow up.  Thanks

4 REPLIES 4

johnrmoyer
Whiz
Whiz

In the camera manual under setting image quality, it shows how to select both raw and JPG.

I have been using raw plus JPG since I have been able to buy enough storage.

Sometimes the out of camera JPG is good enough.

The biggest advantage to raw is that DPP can change white balance, photo style, and colors after the photo is made. DPP can save a JPEG from raw at higher quality than the camera does, or reduce quality or reduce resolution to make a file smaller.

 

ebiggs1
Legend
Legend

IMHO, there is no good reason for using jpg. Not that it really matters about storage space, jpg just is not needed except in very small limited situations. I take thousands upon thousands of photos. I sell my photos. I have not saved a jpg in decades. Personally, I use Photoshop and recommend everybody use it if they want the best possible images but DPP4 is a very capable editor and you can't beat free. Although I have PS, I also have DPP4. DPP4 makes raw a seamless venture another reason to use raw.

 

To expand on the reply above, nothing except exposure is basically saved in a raw file. You can set everything at your leisure on your computer screen as you like in post. Now of course you can do some of this editing using jpg as well but not nearly as much compared to raw. Here's the real kicker, all cameras capture any shot you make at full resolution. Your camera uses all of its ability to create that image. When it is saved to the SD that is what is saved when you set it to raw. Now if you chose jpg your camera discards data that it deems unnecessary. It can never be recovered, never. This happens in the compression of the raw file to jpg. Plus the camera settings are baked in the jpg file upon saving. 

EB
EOS 1DX and 1D Mk IV and less lenses then before!

AndyInAnnapolis
Apprentice

Thanks to both John and ebiggs, great suggestions.  I'm defiantly a casual photographer and graduating from snapshots taken with an iPhone.   Using EOS in A mode works nicely for most of my pix, and expect over time I will graduate to all M and Raw only; fully appreciate the additional editability and resolution the Raw provides and would like to use it if the pix are more than snapshots.  I did finally find the Raw/JPG button in DPP so I do see both images for each shot.  I guess my confusion is more M vs A.  Is it correct that unlike M, A uses the camera to set ISO and Exposure while M adds additional flexibility?


@AndyInAnnapolis wrote:

Thanks to both John and ebiggs, great suggestions.  

...

  I did finally find the Raw/JPG button in DPP so I do see both images for each shot.  I guess my confusion is more M vs A.  Is it correct that unlike M, A uses the camera to set ISO and Exposure while M adds additional flexibility?


I seldom use M, but usually use Av or Tv. Av when the subject is not moving or I want to control depth of field. Tv when the subject is moving or I want to control shutter speed. I nearly always leave ISO at auto.

I only use the out of camera JPG for more than a preview when I want to send it to someone without putting it on my computer.

I do not know which of your settings your camera has, but I turn off auto lighting optimizer in the camera. I turn off distortion correction in the camera. I turn off highlight tone priority in the camera. I apply those later in DPP if I want them. I use picture style "Standard" in the camera and change it later in DPP if I want another one.

If I were uploading images in real time as I made them, I would do things differently.

What settings to use depends partly upon how soon one wants the image to be viewed and what changes one plans to make on the computer and what will be the final viewing conditions for the image. If posted to social media, then different edits than if printed and hung in a gallery.

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