Tuolumne
Veteran
You have digital pictures from 1950? 😉
"x" = fill in the blank.
No digipics from 1950, but in 2059 today's digipics will look just as colorful, bright and contrasty then as they do now. 🙂
/T
You have digital pictures from 1950? 😉
"x" = fill in the blank.
No digipics from 1950, but in 2059 today's digipics will look just as colorful, bright and contrasty then as they do now. 🙂
/T
"x" = fill in the blank.
No digipics from 1950, but in 2059 today's digipics will look just as colorful, bright and contrasty then as they do now. 🙂
/T
While JPEGs have their issues, just moving 'em around with system copy commands sure won't degrade them. Really. (Opening and re-saving them in editing applications is another matter.)Even copying from one location to another seems to some extend degrade them. So, on a drive which you would compress, or run disk defragmenter on a lot, files will eventually lose quality.
I'm not an expert on the subject, but have read this on several occasions both in print and on the net.
That might actually not be the case, if you open and close your JPEGs in software a lot.
Since JPEGs are compressed, they are rendered each time you open them and save them. Even copying from one location to another seems to some extend degrade them. So, on a drive which you would compress, or run disk defragmenter on a lot, files will eventually lose quality.
I'm not an expert on the subject, but have read this on several occasions both in print and on the net.
In short: save your files in uncompressed TIFF, PSD, DNG, etc. Downside: takes up a lot more space...
If you like snapshot of vacation and are an amateur or a professionnal doing commercial work digital is the way to go. If you are an ARTIST, and are searching for that special orginal vision/rendition, then going film will give you orginality and rarity. I shoot film over digital anyday, all the digital files looks the same sharpened thing same color ETC.