▲ | Ancapistani 6 days ago | ||||||||||||||||||||||
> That's a very contemptuous thing to say. I really don't think it is. When I pick up a camera, my intent is one of two things: the experience of photography itself, or the best quality I can reasonably obtain. Neither of those goals are attained with a smartphone. Every other time I take a photo, it's with a smartphone. It's easily good enough for the vast majority of use cases. > Even if one is using in-camera JPEG and does not want to spend 1hr/picture in Darktable, That's... absurd. Granted I lean toward a more "street photography" style, but it's exceptionally rare that I spend more then ~30s on a photo in Lightroom. Most of that time is spent cropping. White balance, exposure correction, etc. are all done in bulk. > they can still play with many more objectives, exposure, shutter time, physical zoom, aperture, etc. Sure - and why wouldn't you want to play with RAW as well? It's not like the profile the camera would have used isn't embedded in the RAW anyhow. > I'd even go the other way around: if you just bought a camera, just use in-camera JPEGs for the first months and familiarize yourself with all the rest (positioning, framing, understanding your camera settings, etc.) before jumping into digital development. I don't disagree with this at all. Of course there are edge cases; that's why I said "probably". To put it another way: if you're shooting JPEGs regularly, you're almost certainly not doing it for the craft. There are very few reasons I can think of to choose a traditional camera if you're not going to take advantage of the improvements in ISO and dynamic range that it offers - and those are two things you give up[0] shooting JPEG. 0: You give up ISO in that you are discarding much of the information that you could use to push/pull process, which is very often preferable to very high ISO. ETA: I just looked it up. In 2024, I kept 767 photos from my iPhone and 1,900 from my cameras. That includes multiple performances of my wife's dance studio, so the latter is heavily skewed by that. Excluding those, I kept 376. In other words, I appear to be taking my own advice here. | |||||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | ubercow13 6 days ago | parent | next [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||
>and those are two things you give up[0] shooting JPEG No you don't? Good in camera JPEGs will utilise push-pull processing, exposing for maximal dynamic range all for you. You don't lose the advantages of the better optics and sensor just because the JPEG is produced in camera. | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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▲ | shakow 6 days ago | parent | prev | next [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||
All that you said is perfectly valid for your usecase. But you can't just make your use case a generality. Some people have a camera because they want to take better pictures than their smartphone but don't want to bother with post-processing, some have tried manual processing and found that the work/result balance was not doing it for them, some think that JPEGs look perfectly fine, some just don't have the time to do the processing... there are myriads of reason for which people would like to land somewhere between “let iOS do it” and “I systematically chose my ISO according to this Darktable script I developed these last years”. | |||||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | dotancohen 6 days ago | parent | prev [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Cellphones absolutely can produce high quality results. Especially if you add the constraint "best quality I can reasonably obtain" as many consider carrying a dedicated camera all the time to not be reasonable. And this was the case even before the advent of the smartphone. How many people did you see carrying a camera in 1980, or 1990, or 2000? Almost zero.The best camera, is the camera you have on you. |