You need to set the camera output in the menu. You can set it to jpegs only, raw only or JPEG+RAW, it will use what ever you have set it to in any mode.with a Nikon d 750 in auto will it give you both raw and jpegs or just jpegs
Unless you hand your camera to someone else to take a shot. Then do it!Auto? Don't do it!!
Read this and thought. "No, that can't be right". So went to have a look.I'm not a Nikon shooter, but you cannot shoot in raw when in full auto on a Canon.
Don't know if Nikon is different, but if you can and you have the ability to process raw files, then it will give you a bit more flexibility in terms of fixing mistakes.
•You need to set the camera output in the menu. You can set it to jpegs only, raw only or JPEG+RAW, it will use what ever you have set it to in any mode.
would it be good to shoot in raw when doing landscape?
Thanks thats an amazing article
Read this and thought. "No, that can't be right". So went to have a look.
5D3 - Yup, I could select RAW on in full auto (it's got full auto - who knew? )
7D1 - Again, I could select RAW on in full auto
1100D - a proper low end consumer model - again, I could select RAW in Full Auto
Finally, found one where I couldn't... The old 350D only allows jpeg (fine of normal I think) in full auto, change it to AV ot TV and a couple of RAW options reappear.
So I thought, blimey I wonder what Elliot shoots with, kudos for staying with something elderly. But no... Evidently 6D and 7D2 users can't be trusted with options newer than those of a 2005 camera
with a Nikon d 750 in auto will it give you both raw and jpegs or just jpegs
wgat is the advantageof RAW
wgat is the advantageof RAW
as above I like to think of RAW as a digital negative
Les
However, you won't get the best out of your camera and won't be using any photographic skills yourself to push the camera to its limits and/or get the results you want.
Dave
Auto? Don't do it!!
Soz, but that's just rubbish advice
I use Auto almost all of the time, there are very few instances when its not quite right with a little compensation added
For Weddings especially you'd struggle to shoot in Manual all the time without missing shots
Your comment harks back to the "old boys club" attitude that Manual is what 'proper' togs use, its just not true and is likely to confuse a newbie
Firstly; AV and TV are Auto modes, we can't choose to not describe them as such. In a binary Auto vs Manual debate they are clearly not Manual.We'll have to agree to disagree, Dave.
Auto (and by this I mean full auto, not Av or Tv, where the photographer is making a decision) will give the results the photographer wants sometimes, perhaps, most of the time. However, in auto the camera could use an aperture which does not give the depth of field the photographer wants or a shutter speed to slow to stop movement; and if auto is used then the photographer has no input so isn't using any photographic skills. The camera could easily be capable of giving the results the photographer wants but without some control, it might not happen.
I'm not harking back to Manual being what 'proper' photographers use. It isn't something I subscribe to and fortunately it is view is not seen very often now. I rarely use manual, mostly I use Av because DoF is, in most of my shots, the important thing of me.
Dave
But by 'Auto' Dave was talking about everything not 'Manual'I think I should have made myself clearer in my first post in this thread. By 'Auto' I mean using the green box where there isn't any input from the photographer, but perhaps I'm in a minority of one. Maybe Av, Tv and P should be called semi-auto modes.
Dave