xihalife
Member
jaapv said:This is totally oversimplified and thus incorrect.The RAW storage is far more complicated. The files behave like 14 bits files for most of the scale due to the algorithm that points at the lookup table. See various LFI articles amongst other publications for details and diagrams comparing it to true 14 bits files. Overblown highlights are lost in any digital photograph. The number of bits won't help you one bit there, btw. The only thing to do is to expose correctly. RAW is not more " sharp" than Jpeg. That is a totally different part of the story.
Jaap, I would suggest you experiment with CR2-files on Canon cameras. You can over-expose a photo so that there's completely white areas, and then load it to Lightroom and change the exposure. Perfect color will be revealed from the white pixels. If you do the same with M8's RAW files, the white pixels give you no color information at all. I use M8 and 400D, and in practice the 400D has a lot of dynamic range, M8 has very little if any at all.
I don't know how the lookup table for 14 bit colors would work but I guess you mean you have 8 bits per color component which point to an array of 256 14-bit values... or perhaps there are mupltiple look-up tables if the image is split into multiple smaller segments. Perhaps they are not storing color values above 1.0, and instead just have more precision on the lower end of the scale. This would not be such a good idea given the noise - it's a common technique in Canon to shoot slightly over-exposed and then correct the exposure in LightRoom to get the best color reproduction. Anyway, whatever they have done with M8, the dynamic range is just not there.
As for JPEG... I don't know for you, but the JPEG files I have looked at from M8 are heavily compressed and lose a lot of fine detail. When zoomed in, they look almost like looking at a television screen compared to a computer monitor. That is what I mean by RAW being sharper - it doesn't lose detail.