RAW files contain the raw, unprocessed information from the camera's sensor, whereas the JPEGs have the device manufacturer's processing on them. RAW images provide a lot of flexibility when editing in applications like Adobe Lightroom. You can recover a lot of detail you otherwise might lose in JPEGs. After processing them you export them as JPEGs.
Here's a good example I found online:
They take up a lot of space. A picture of my housemate's cat was 3.2 MB in JPEG and 16.6 MB in RAW.
Interesting! How do phones typically encode their files, and what are the benefits of shooting RAW+JPEG?
RAW files contain the raw, unprocessed information from the camera's sensor, whereas the JPEGs have the device manufacturer's processing on them. RAW images provide a lot of flexibility when editing in applications like Adobe Lightroom. You can recover a lot of detail you otherwise might lose in JPEGs. After processing them you export them as JPEGs.
Here's a good example I found online:
They take up a lot of space. A picture of my housemate's cat was 3.2 MB in JPEG and 16.6 MB in RAW.
woah, that's super cool! thanks for sharing and providing an example 🙂