The closest is Adobe's DNG format, which niche cameras and smartphones capable of shooting RAW files tend to embrace. This is not the format your Nikon, Canon, or Sony camera uses. Some cameras do shoot in a format known as RAW, but the overwhelming majority do not. RAW files require specialized programs to view or edit them. When I shoot raw + jpeg the images look identical. No difference when I download them to my laptop. Whatever picture style the camera is set to is applied to the raw image. The JPEG that's embedded in the raw file is generally the same as the one you get in the separate file, so picture style etc. are apparent in that image as well. Set the camera’s power switch to . 2. Press the button to display the menu. 3. Press the < > button and select the [ ] tab. 4. Turn the < > dial to select the [ ] tab. 5. Turn the < > dial to select [RAW image processing], then press < >. Solution 1. Select [One-touch RAW+JPEG]. Under the [] tab, select [One-touch RAW+JPEG], then press < >. 2. Select RAW or JPEG. Turn the < > dial and select RAW or JPEG, then press < >. 3. Select the image-recording quality. Turn the < > dial to select the image recording quality, then press < >. 4. The terms RAW and JPEG aren't meaningful or applicable when it comes to video recording. 3. if you want the highest quality screen grabs use the highest quality video setting: You would be well served by taking the time to read the manual that came with your camera and maybe check out some YouTube videos. Clarity: 0 – does not matter when shooting in RAW. Lens aberration correction: I disable all lens corrections because they only apply to JPEG images. If you are a JPEG shooter, leaving these on will reduce vignetting, chromatic aberration, distortion and diffraction issues in your images. Peripheral illum corr: Off; Distortion correction: Off 7tLTj. 244 398 57 452 20 167 282 416 283

how to shoot in raw and jpeg canon