![]() Your hard-drive will thank you… □ Generally, I would say there’s not any point to export to TIFF except for printing. If all you’re going do with it is post it online, or view it on your laptop, then JPG is perfectly acceptable. If you’re planning on printing, then TIFF is probably a good idea. That totally depends on what you plan to do with the exported files. You might be interested in reading my thread about JPG compression here: 30% compression is really compressed, I would certainly have thought that you would see a difference at 100% magnification. I assume it’s JPG compression? When I compress JPG files, I usually use about the 70-99% range. Second, I’d be interested to know what the 30% compression you talked about is. If TIFF files and JPEGs have similar picture quality, why TIFF files are so heavy?įirst, I’d be interested to know what software you’re using Lightroom? Darktable? ![]() RAW (about 25 Mo) to TIFF (around 100 Mo ) to JPEG (not much, around 5 Mo if memory serves me well □ ) We’re talking about 100 Mo files! That’s something I don’t understand. Correct reasoning?Īlso, although it’s not an issue now, TIFF files are heavy. (TIFF files may have both 8 and 16 bits) So I guess that when I export 14 bits to 8 bits, I lose information, but when I export them into 16 bits TIFF files, I have useless information. ![]() JPEG files have only the option of 8 bits. ![]() Should I bother exporting my RAW files into TIFF files or directly export them as JPEGs? Even though I have used a compression of something like 30%, my TIFF files and JPEGs were alike in a 100% crop. Recently I emailed some pictures and I exported my TIFF files to JPEGs. ![]() I transfer my RAW files on my computer and then edit and export them as TIFF files. ![]()
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