![]() ![]() ![]() ProRaw shots demand editing work to bring out their best, just like any other raw file. If you're more about snapping and quickly sharing those moments with family and friends, then you should probably stick to JPEG. Whether you should use it yourself depends very much on the style of your photography. ![]() Watch this: iPhone 12 Pro Max: Diving in on a single charge It's a slower process, but the resulting quality is much higher. I'll frequently spend half an hour or more on a single landscape image, and my product and car photographs may well take multiple hours of work. Some of you reading this might not love the idea of spending so much time editing a single image, but spending that time is common in professional photography to ensure an image comes out absolutely perfectly. The information has been captured however, which is how I've been able to lift the shadows in this example so well. It's difficult to say why this is, exactly, but it means that I've had to work a bit harder to get the image back to a "good" place before I then start editing more creatively. I've noticed that ProRaw files that look good in the photo gallery suddenly look overly dark - or sometimes overly bright - when opened in Lightroom, as well as in some other editing apps like Snapseed. It's worth remembering, though, that I've been using ProRaw in beta form, and Adobe is yet to update Lightroom to properly support the files. ![]()
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