A Very Special Thanks to our Photographers.

Man, Jimmy's boat was like made for you guys :sifone: James, I am afraid to go to a photo forum.:willy_nilly: 9 years ago I looked on an offshore forum and look where I am now. And 9 years ago I didn't have an offshore boat, I have a camera :biggrinjester::sifone:

Careful there, Ted... might lead to dancing. :26:

The orange and blues on that boat harmonize well with water... and the soft light down there was great for the water color.

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Careful there, Ted... might lead to dancing. :26:

The orange and blues on that boat harmonize well with water... and the soft light down there was great for the water color.

Can't dance since a terrible Interpretive Dance accident in college, the horror........:ack2:
 
Question for the pros. If I shoot ONE jpeg and ONE RAW file, how many pics did I take ? ;)
Technically TWO. A RAW FILE Converted will never be the exact same image as the JPEG. That is the whole reason for shooting RAW in the 1st place. To make the final end result the best image it can be prior to conversion. If you're not looking to make it better than the JPEG, than there is no point shooting in a RAW format.

If I were to export the master files out of Aperture 2 to an external hard drive, I end up with 2 files. JPEG & CR2 (RAW)

EATON said:
I haven't actually, spoken to anyone, who deletes the Raw's. Your the First.
Once I have made the images the best they can be, there is no reason for me to store 11 meg per image files on my hard drives. I find it a waste of memory.

P.S.

My replacement Canon Body arrived today... Noreaster headed this way so hopefully I will have some SURFING action to test this one out on.:sifone:
 
:rofl:I haven't worked much with RAW files yet, but I have worked with Aperture. I'm still amazed at what you can do with the RAW file format. Now if You saw what I do with the RAW formats, you'd never wonder why I still shoot JPG format

I just have last year's Canon SX10 IS, which is fine for me, although night shots are not very good. The work you guys put into these pictures is amazing.
 
Shooting comes down to timing & patience. :)
Having the patience to get the right composition of an image and nailing it can really make one's day ! :)

These guys were all milling in circles prior to the start. Here, they are all facing in the opposite direction of the Starting line, but I waited and I waited and by chance, I caught them in formation ! Even got the Geico boat there too! ;)

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