- Joined
- Dec 5, 2016
- Messages
- 995
- Reaction score
- 291
- Age
- 42
And this is how misinformation never dies.
Fact:
A raw file NEVER comes straight of a sensor, a sensor cant even read colors, thats why its a 3 colored filter also known as RGB added on top of the sensor, aka Debayer filter.
The DeBayer filter is used to convert raw image data into an RGB image. In a raw color image, every pixel represents a value for one basic color, instead of three as is the case for an RGB image. In order to get a real color image, the two missing colors have to be interpolated. This is exactly what this filter does.
In regards to my OP, forget the jpg vers, it is true what some of you said, that this was much flatter due to D-cinelike profile added, but my concern was only the raw file, which stil in my opinion, have to much contrast and saturation from the STARTING point.
If you start to edit in the far end, you will obviously loose the "maximum" range of "pulling" the picture into the extreme before it starts to crack, this is most visible in the shadow areas where most of the noise will be introduced and noticeable. Thats why it need to be as close to the "center" of the range as possible when you start editing, to be able to take full advantage in any direction, both highlights, and shadows.
Just like DJI failed to make a good D-log file, probably cause they havent got proper "how to" knowledge, i think the tweaking of the raw files can also be improved to take full advantage of 12 stops of DR, even with such small sensor.
gr8pics,
Your observations and concerns were spot on from the first post on through. I'm not sure why some folks felt it necessary to get so adversarial.
When I got my Canon 5D mkII 7 years ago, it took me a while to discover that, while I was shooting RAW, my photos were contrasty with blown highlights, crushed shadows, oversaturated, and sharpened in-camera. After a few months of hating my pics, I got schooled on Picture Profiles (names that mean nothing) for sharpness, contrast, saturation and tone. The '0' values are not zero at all. Since then, I use the 'Neutral' (meaningless name) to -4, -4, -4 to get something flatter, still not as flat as a log profile, but good enough to work with.
Seemingly, RAW is an ambiguous term and the sharpness/contrast/ settings are relative to the engineering of the sensor and the processing. Your sample RAW pics do not look anything like any LOG profile I've seen working in professional video. They look contrasty and over-saturated, far from a flat LOG profile. Having to lift the shadows, recover highlights and desaturate in LR to achieve a flatter appearance is the opposite of a LOG workflow. I appreciate your very comprehensive and informative posts in this thread.
You haven't demonstrated that this is happening. I suggest you go ahead and process the raw file by raising the shadows and lowering the highlights and then show us, how, compared to the JPEG file, the raw is retaining less detail in the highlights and/or in the shadows. If that's indeed the case, then I think you'd have a lot more people willing to concede that there's an issue with DJI's raw implementation.
But all you've done so far is show that the default processing of DJI raw files in your raw editing software gives you an image with more contrast than a JPEG shot with the d-cinelike color profile. Why do you conclude this is a property of the data in the raw file rather than a consequence of the way that your raw editing software debayers that data and the contrast (gamma) curve your software applies?
you must be intentionally trolling at this point.
Certainly, again, for you, and new readers.
Screenshot of 100% after processing them to look as close to each other as possible.
Dng file is even less sharpened.
So, since a raw file contains so much more data, have so much greater DR, it would look allot better than the jpg version that has been processed twice now, right?
So which one look clearly better if you look at the details and shadow areas?
Oh, and dont mention that raw saved straight from the sensor has been cropped more than the jpg.
I see mud and noise. Perhaps my expectations are higher than what the camera delivers?
Same exposure, one is raw file, the other jpg (untouched) I just retouched the raw to accompany the jpg, you can see the file name on the tabs on top of the pics.So we're those shot separate, or RAW+jpeg?
I see the moving car is in the same place so wondering if this is a limited bug to raw+jpeg
Sent from my F8331 using PhantomPilots mobile app
I also noticed on these forums, that people of "high ranks" or thousands of postings are quick to judge new members as amateurs with no knowledge about anything, please stop that, theres allot of resourceful people out there that probably have ten times more knowledge than yourself, gained over years with experience, which also would love to share and teach, but if you start jumping at them, they will just stop, even if they could advice you with personal experience on that field.<br />Dont take it personally that a "rookie" sometimes knows better than you, or even worse, get offended by it, take advantage of it instead, to gain even more knowledge yourself, ask more instead of judging, and you will be amazed to see how many people smiles back at you if you smile at them<br /><br />Have a nice one everybody.<br />Peace out!
Just for fun,
Dji's own example files in Dng, untouched, can you see the big difference between the old camera and the new?
No? Thats cause there arent, even with 4 times larger sensor and supposedly better optics.
View attachment 73729 View attachment 73730
I feel bad for the people who walk away from this thread thinking RAW is post-processed like a JPEG. You can call debayer, pixel binning, etc. processing if you like but that does not make a RAW image processed like a JPEG image. There's a difference between processing the image and a setting in the metadata.
I'm pulling perfectly good DNGs off the P4P. If you don't like what you see, move a slider or two! That's the whole point of RAW!
P.S. Anyone who says "I'm a professional photographer, therefore..." might just lose most of their credibility right there!![]()
Agreed. One should be weary of appeals to authority in general -- if someone knows their stuff, that is best demonstrated through their analysis and explanation, not by some title, especially a self-ascribed one. I am certain there are plenty of very good photographers out there who don't necessarily understand all the technology they are using to capture their images. While I feel that there is value to understanding the tools one works with, photography is both a science and an art. At the end of the day, composition, lighting, emotion, capturing the decisive moment -- that's what makes for compelling photography, not how much detail your images have under pixel-peeping.
Just for fun,
Dji's own example files in Dng, untouched, can you see the big difference between the old camera and the new?
No? Thats cause there arent, even with 4 times larger sensor and supposedly better optics.
View attachment 73729 View attachment 73730
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.