Originally Posted by
DanK
I'm in the same camp as Richard--once I tried raw, I never turned back.
Maybe I'm nitpicking, but I wonder if discussions of SOOC and raw vs. jpeg would go better if we dropped the word "postprocessing" and used "processing." All digital images are processed; what differs is only how you do it. There are three options:
1. Choose a processing algorithm in advance by selecting a picture style and shooting jpeg. This processing sets all the parameters as a unit and is done without seeing the image, but it is still processing.
2. Do the same as #1, but continue processing with software after the image is taken off the camera.
3. Shoot raw, which requires that all processing is done in software.
The main difference between 1 and 2 is that you give up the ability to vary individual parameters (sharpening, color balance, etc.) and give up processing in response to what the image looks like. The main difference between 2 and 3 is the loss of information and flexibility in the editing done in software. (Anyone who doubts that should go out on a sunny day, set the camera for tungsten, and try to clean up the mess afterward.)
There is no virtue or vice in any of this. All options entail processing; they differ only in the tools used to do the processing and the amount of control the photographer retains.