Originally Posted by
GrumpyDiver
Randy - if you are shooting raw and are using any of the raw editors (Lightroom, Adobe Camera Raw, Phase One Capture One, DxO Labs Optics Pro, Apple Aperture, the raw converter that shipped with your camera, etc.) there are a few important things to remember:
1. Raw data has not been assigned a colour space; the moment you start working an image, a colour space will be used. Pick one that is appropriate for what you are doing;
2. Raw files do not have a white balance or gamma assigned, Once you finish your edit these values will be "baked in" to your image file.
3. This software can include lens profile data and depending on the source, this can be applied to your raw data to remove lens distortion and chromatic aberration. Not all raw converters are created equal; DxO Optics Pro is generally viewed as having the best database and consequently the best corrections. Some of the earlier versions of ACR / Lightroom were criticized for poor colour accuracy, but that problem was solved with Lightroom 3 / Photoshop CS5.
When I shoot RAW, I try to do the "heavy lifting" in the raw convertor and do the finishing in Photoshop. Pretty well the only thing I don't do in ACR (or Lightroom) is sharpening as I just don't like the way the function works. I probably do 99% of my sharpening with Unsharp Mask and occasionally I will use Smart Sharpen.