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Originally Posted by
Colin Southern
Hi Kris,
The biggest advantage of 16 bit is when you're pushing and pulling tonal ranges and you want to avoid banding and other nasties caused by steps that become so big in an 8 bit scheme that they become visible.
So if you get to the point where you've already done the damage then switching to 16 bit isn't going to help - or if you're close to the limit under 8 bit - switch to 16, and make more adjustments then even though it's 16 bit, you may still start to see the damage that was done under 8 bit.
But if you switch to 16 bit after opening the image in 8 bit you may still sidestep things like rounding errors etc.
I think the best advice I can give is always work in 16 bit mode if you can (and then convert back to 8 bit at the end if you wish), but switching to 16 bit may still give you more of a safety margin than you'd have had had you have stuck to 8 bit all the way.
The best plan of all though is to do all of your big adjustments whilst the image is still in RAW, for a couple of reasons:
1. The image is still in linear gamma - so no information has been thrown away yet, and
2. What a lot of people don't realise is that the likes of ACT only ever applies one "adjustment" to an image. eg If you raise the exposure - apply a GND - boost the saturation etc, ACR doesn't apply one adjustment - then another - then another - it rolls them all into 1 big one, which gives the image the "best possible chance in life" when it's released from the incubator (ACR) and out into the big wide world (Photoshop)