RAW vs JPG: What's the Story? Part 2

Let me just come right out and say it—I'm a JPG girl. (gasp!)

Make no mistake about it, I've experimented with RAW and occasionally shoot it for corporate clients who have specific needs—but other than that, I mostly just curse at it on the rare occasion when I find myself shooting RAW by accident.

It seems I'm never quite able to get the color I want form RAW files. They're big, bulky, and since they end up as JPGs anyway, I prefer to cut through the middle and get straight to the point.

Because I shoot in manual mode 100% of the time and keep an obsessive eye on exposure and white balance (carrying a highly used pack of color correction gels for all my flashes), I'm able to consistently nail exposure and white balance in-camera and don't need the extra weight or cushion of a RAW file to correct things later. It's part of what makes my workflow so awesomely lean and efficient.

I shoot JPG because it works for me. Others love RAW because it works for them. As long as you're shooting in a format that works for you, you're in good shape! :)

(If you're looking for Part 1 of this post, you can find it here.)