PDA

View Full Version : Editing Workflow Plan - Assistance Required



Snooks
22-10-2018, 1:35pm
Hi Guys :)

So I have been taking photos and then I rush back in, upload them to the pc and see what I have. From there, I jump willy nilly into editing.

I may adjust the brightness, the exposure, add or remove some contrast and then no doubt I do other changes that should have been done last. Sometimes I know that I have amplified issues and made things worse.

I do not know when to crop to size? Do I do that first so I am working on smaller files?

Do I adjust basic colours etc first and then look at composing and cropping?

I need an efficient and authorized workflow plan because what I am doing is not working!

I work in RAW at first, adjust the white balance and then convert to jpeg so i can work in GIMP. I may have to change that and I realize that I may have no choice...... I need someone to suggest how they approach the whole editing thing, step by step.

If you can spare the time to post your editing plan or ideas, it would be of great assistance.

ameerat42
22-10-2018, 2:17pm
Hi Guys :)

...From there, I jump willy nilly into editing.

I may adjust the brightness, the exposure, add or remove some contrast and then no doubt I do other changes that should have been done last. Sometimes I know that I have amplified issues and made things worse.

I do not know when to crop to size? Do I do that first so I am working on smaller files?

Do I adjust basic colours etc first and then look at composing and cropping?

I need an efficient and authorized workflow plan because what I am doing is not working!

I work in RAW at first, adjust the white balance and then convert to jpeg so i can work in GIMP. I may have to change that and I realize that I may have no choice...... I need someone to suggest how they approach the whole editing thing, step by step...

It's good you have a method already. The details show that you have some idea of what you're doing
so that willy-nilly bird species may not be the right name for your workflow.

I will just describe what you need to essentially do, without too many specific instances, as these will
differ from yours and from other people's, and the detail may not be relevant.

1) Aim is to convert the raw image from your camera into something workable for another system.
This may be displaying (invariably as jpeg) on the net, or to get some prints done. I'll stick to the first.

2) In doing so, you try to maintain as much of the original info of the raw file as possible, and to "fix"
any tonal and other compositional errors. Reason: In going from raw to jpeg you want good gradation
in colour and tone, trying to maintain the brightest and darkest as much as possible, and without too
many jumps in between (which is usually shown as "banding").

(Of course, you can ditch much of point 2 if you're trying to produce something abstract where such
things may not be so important.)

3) You usually do the conversion from raw to jpeg when you have done as much as you can in the
raw editor (point 2). Save as a jpeg at the maximum quality setting. Change that after re-sizing, if it is
necessary.

4) Rotation and cropping is usually done after the color and tone adjustments. This may be done in the
raw editor - but look out for what happens to the raw file - or, as I do, on a full-size jpeg saved from the
worked raw file.

5) Re-sizing is usually done on the full-size jpeg. Tonal gradation should be maintained during this step, but if
any banding becomes evident then you may have to revisit the raw file.

6) After re-sizing, a mild sharpening may be required. (Too many reasons to say why and lots more opinions.)
Since sharpening involves a contrast change between different tones of an image, other artifacts may
appear, such as edge haloes.

7) Final jpeg save: after re-sizing - properly, re-sampling - to the desired image size (say 1200 pixels
as for AP), try a save first at the maximum jpeg quality (12 in Photoshop). If the file size is still over the max
400 KB requirement, re-do the save on the still open image using a lower quality setting, and overwrite the
file name you just saved. Repeat until you get the right size. NOTE that this does NOT degrade the saved file
as you still have the original image open in the editor. File degradation occurs when you re-open a saved file
and do the above steps.

OK, so that's my general gist of things.

Bear Dale
22-10-2018, 3:56pm
YouTube can be a great friend for PP tutorials. I use it all the time, don't gel with the first person showing a tutorial? Just go to the next, some people just have that real teachers knack of imparting knowledge.

Whatever you want to know there's a 99.9% that someone has taken the time to make a YouTube tutorial about it!

Bianca
22-10-2018, 3:56pm
Snooks, I don't know what you're using to process and convert from RAW, but:

1. Do as much as you can in that RAW editor program eg exposure, white balance etc, because RAW files contain much more information and allow editing without loss. If there's effects or local adjustments (eg cloning something out) that need to be done to your image that your RAW editor can't cope with, export the photo to TIFF. TIFF files are huge but lossless and GIMP supports them. (JPEG (jpg) files are compressed files and each opening and saving will lead to degradation of the image.)

2. Do your further editing in GIMP and save your file as TIFF (overwrite it) each time. Do whatever you couldn't do in your RAW editor here in GIMP. Then, when you want to show or post your image:

3. Open your TIFF file in GIMP and do your export to jpg at the size you want (eg 1200px for AP) and the highest quality you can do and still be at a reasonable size (400kb for AP) .

Snooks
22-10-2018, 5:20pm
Awesome information and exactly what I needed. Obviously it can change according to numerous variables, but at least I have a firm plan and a formal path to go down so I don't just do things adhoc.

Thank you for that.
Now....... what will be lurking around tomorrow that I can practice on ? :flash:

Tannin
22-10-2018, 8:21pm
Do it whichever way works best for you.

One tip, don't convert to JPG until the very last step. Do all your intermediate saves in a loss-free format. Your best choice is almost certainly TIFF. GIMP will happily read TIFF files.

Mark L
25-10-2018, 9:26pm
AM said "5) Re-sizing is usually done on the full-size jpeg." I don't agree. As Tony mentioned in the previous post here the last thing you want to do is convert to JPG. You are re-sizing with a larger file if you do it before converting to JPG.

Geoff79
26-10-2018, 9:10am
I’ll post my general workflow as it probably suits someone relatively new to photography. For, as is the person typing this, it’s a pretty simple workflow.

Not only do I welcome... but I encourage more experienced members to point out glaring faults because I’m not currently overly happy with my output, so always looking for those extra tips. :)

Anyway, Snooks, more or less as per my post on your recent train thread;

RAW file;
(If necessary, tweak white balance if you’re displeased with it)
1. Right or wrong, first thing I do when I open my raw file is straighten and crop
2. Adjust shadows and highlights in order to try and correct blown highlights and very dark shadows

Then I open in PS, personally;
3. Adjust contrast (I like auto-levels in PS as it gives you four potential outcomes to choose from)
4. Reduce noise
5. Sharpen (I guess you could switch these two around just as easy)
6. Final contrast adjustment to suit

I know that’s basic and doesn’t go into the detail others above provide, but like I say, right or wrong this is how I roll. :)

Snooks
26-10-2018, 9:41am
Thanks Geoff.

I haven't got any images to work on until tomorrow evening at that Car Show. I wandered through an old church yesterday and took some photos including a very old cemetery, I will try the work flow plan on one of those later today.

Sounds nice and simple and certainly worth trying.

A couple of questions if you or someone else can assist:

1. Exposure Control Vs Brightness -Altering these makes the images brighter. Is there really any difference between the function?

2. When I "sharpen" something it makes the whole thing much noisier and also more contrasty or grainy. So what is the difference between sharpening and contrasting?

Thanks for the tips :)

Geoff79
26-10-2018, 10:31am
Oh dear, Snooks. There are much more experienced and knowledgeable members here that I hope can help you out with the technicalities.

I don’t actually know difference between exposure and Brightness. All I know is that I never, ever, ever use the Brightness slider, ever. As I never have use for it.

Regarding sharpening, I believe many don’t sharpen until they actually post a photo somewhere. Because if you take a good photo it shouldn’t need sharpening. :) But, if you do want/need to apply sharpening, I urge you to look up some tutorials on layers and the art of only brushing in the sharpening (or whatever other edits you make) to the parts of the photo you want sharpened - not the entire image.

Sorry mate. I like taking photos and have a basic understanding of editing stuff. But when it comes to technicalities and knowledgeable advice on the ins and outs of photography, there are far, far wiser people here to explain this stuff to you. :)

ameerat42
26-10-2018, 11:53am
...

1. Exposure Control Vs Brightness -Altering these makes the images brighter. Is there really any difference between the function?

2. When I "sharpen" something it makes the whole thing much noisier and also more contrasty or grainy. So what is the difference between sharpening and contrasting?...

Basically,
Brightness adds the same value to every tone in an image. (Iit makes the mid-tones equal in value to the highlight.)
ie, Black = 0, Mid-tone = 127, Highlight = 255. Max "Brightness" shifts "Black" → 127 and "Mid-tone" → 255.

Exposure (which tries to simulate what happens in the camera) can drag every tone from 0 to 255.
It affects the lighter tones more than the darker tones.

To see the difference in operation, make sure you have your Histogram displayed and try each function on an image
in turn. Cancel the first function, eg Brightness, before trying Exposure.

Sharpening works by enhancing the contrast changes across "edges" in an image. To see what edges look like, run that
filter over an image. The main sharpening tool that GIMP shows is "Unsharp Mask" (you look that up). It's default settings
show 3 pixels of radius. A lesser value will reduce the sharpening and therefore the graininess. You also lessen the effect
by using the threshold control (also you look up).

Contrast is applied to tones, where highs are made higher and shadows are made darker. Mid-tones are "sent either way"
according to the settings of the function and things like Gamma and Offset.

John King
26-10-2018, 12:56pm
Snooks, IME the less one does to an image, the better - less is more!

If anyone can tell that I've edited an image, it usually means that I've gone too far ...

I always recommend that people use an aRGB 16 bit colour space for editing and save as a 16 bit lossless TIFF file for storage. Only resize to an 8 bit sRGB JPEG as your last step before uploading. Save to a different filename - e.g. original.tiff saved as original_E.jpg, or whatever.

Snooks
26-10-2018, 2:00pm
Thanks for the comments and tips everyone. I will read them again and clarify because some only half sunk in. Later I will try the suggestions out on a random image and that should help me.

Thanks again.

ameerat42
26-10-2018, 4:31pm
Snooks. You can repay us - or me :nod:

How do you display more than one image in GIMP?
Big time :confused013

Snooks
26-10-2018, 11:51pm
Snooks. You can repay us - or me :nod:

How do you display more than one image in GIMP?
Big time :confused013

I don't quite understand your question. I do often edit two images at the same time in GIMP, simply by opening one image and then opening a new image and you switch between them. Perfect for cut and pastes, copy, cloning etc, if that's what you mean.

ameerat42
27-10-2018, 7:02am
It is. That's what I sadly found yesterday. You can't display them side-by-side:(:(

John King
27-10-2018, 12:07pm
You can in FSV or Bridge.

FSV even displays raw files, just hit Ctrl+a to display the raw file, rather than the embedded JPEG.

arthurking83
27-10-2018, 12:57pm
I've commented before:

Use ViewNX2(for D200 files, very good program)

In VNX2, start from the top(RHS Pane), program defaults to the Metadata tab(which is actually a good thing! .. I'll explain later). On the RHS click the Metadata tab to close it, and it will reveal all the tools in the Adjustments tab.
From there you see the exposure, WB, and various other adjustments tools. Start from the top and work your way down as required.
For me, it's usually ends with choosing a Picture Control that suits, sometimes Vivid, sometimes Portrait .. it depends on how the image was exposed, and how harsh/soft the light was at the time of exposure.

Note, once you set the Picture Control, and lets say you used a contrasty Picture Control like 'Vivid' .. it then pays to use the finer adjustment tools below this named contrast/brightness/highlight/shadow .. don't use the sharpness tool tho(reason is that it's very coarse!)

You could try D-Lighting tool and colour booster, but I don't like the way they operate, you can do this later in Gimp .. it's up to you, but ViewNX2(ie. the raw file converter, is to get the raw file close to being edited on a very subtle scale).

ViewNX2 will not clone/heal, or manipulate pixels in hideous ways(like Ps, GIMP, etc) .. it's a basic raw file editor/converter.

Once you have the raw file very close to how you want it to look, you then use a short cut link (that you create) to GIMP to edit a tif file in GIMP. You don't need to go through the additional steps to create a tif file, it will do that for you.

In VNX2
1/. look at the upper toolbar, find the Edit tab, scroll down to the Options link. A box will open up once you do this.
2/. you may or may not have any open with links to start with(it depends on how it was installed). With this box open, on the LHS section look for the Open with Application setting. Click this
3/. once you click that if there is nothing listed in the larger central area, you have no apps linked. Look for the [Add] below the larger area. Hit that.
4/. it varies on what happens here, and you need to know where all your programs are installed, if you have a 64bit PC, or 32bit .. etc. If no applicable programs populate the list when you hit [Add], then click the [Other] button.
By default, it assumes you're in a 64bit OS environment, so you're using 64bit programs. If GIMP is 32bit only, you won't see the link to it, you have to navigate to find it. So, GIMP will either be easily found, but if your PC is 64bit(most are nowadays), you need to navigate out of the Program Files folder, and into the Program Files(x86) folder, if GIMP is 32bit only. I dunno how your PC is setup.
5/. once you find your way through all of that, you need to locate the .exe file for GIMP, and click on that for this to work. Once you find the GIMP.exe file, double click on it, it's then is added to the list of Open with programs.

if you can successfully get through this, now in ViewNX2, once you've added your basic raw edits, you can either rightclick the file on screen and Open with ... it will show you GIMP as an option to open the file with.
OR!! .. you can do one more step to make this easy too ..
6/. up high in the window there are icons to tools such as Convert, Movie Editor, etc, etc. there is a large blank section. Right Click the blank section and scroll down to customise. when you hover the mouse over customise, a long box will pop up, and you will see the Open with option to GIMP you just made, click that. This then creates a shortcut to GIMP you use as you need.

What all this does, is to allow ViewNX2 to create a tif file of the image(s) you select and automagically open it/them up in GIMP. You don't need to go through the steps to convert, it does it for you. All 16bit and no compression(ie. about as good quality as you want/need).

From there, you then play in GIMP.
I still reckon once you edit using CNX-D(for all it's woefullness) and use the Colour Control Point edit method, you won't find an easier way to edit only in NEF file mode.
That is, forget tif, it's a space wasting bloated file type that is long overdue for replacement as the default image file type of choice.
I edit the NEF files, saves a ton of HDD space.

Now back to the top(and why I use VNX2) .. still!
Back to to the topic of Metadata. I strongly urge you to keyword your raw files, and the best way to do this is via VNX2.
In the Metadata tab, scroll down just a little, and look for the section that is marked Tags -> Keywords.
it's a white box where you add words that get embedded into your NEF files. So for a photo of a Cockatoo, just for now, add the word Cockatoo into this box and hit the small save icon.
Doing this from the get go, will save you a world of pain later, when you have many thousands of images of stuff, and you can't locate them easily.

I can explain how to use this metadata stuff in another thread, and you don't need much in the way of software to help with that.

Snooks
28-10-2018, 9:55am
Hi arthurking83.

Twice i have installed that software, twice I fiddled and did not like it. But as soon as I finish typing this post I intend to install it and try it again. You make it sound so functional and enticing and I back your opinion 100%, so I figure it is worth pursuing.

Thank you for the info above, a lot went over my head in the technical pc department but I will check it all again, I will re-read the post with the software open in a different tab.

That should help :)

Cheers.

arthurking83
28-10-2018, 4:27pm
....

Twice i have installed that software, twice I fiddled and did not like it. But as soon as I finish typing this post I intend to install it and try it again. ....

I'm curious as to what you didn't like .. speed? ... workflow? .. final output? ... etc.

It's hard to recommend appropriate software for you as we don't know what computer system and specs you're running with.

Most of us assume a Windows PC of some description.
If so, are you using a laptop as your primary PC? if a desktop, is it 64bit, or 32bit.
What CPU, what hard drive(s), how much RAM ... etc, etc.

I don't have a very powerful PC, but it's more than adequate for my non gaming, primarily photo editing, sometimes video work(encoding) etc, etc.

Many software simply run badly, I never had any luck running Adobe's LR nor Ps.
Nikon's software can run quite quickly, with the caveat that you have at least one separate, and very fast hard drive where the raw files are stored.
ViewNX2 was always one of Nikon's quickest and most stable software, and Capture NX2 was more like a Ps/GIMP type editor where you could do local editing.
Note that local editing is spot editing, or brush editing on various points within an image .. global editing is when you make an edit on the entire image, like whitebalance and so forth.
ViewnX2 is global editing only, doesn't do local editing. That's not the point of VNX2!! it's a simple and quick browser/converter for NEF file.
Any localised editing, you need other software.
I've used GIMP, but prefer PaintDotNet. GIMP had long since been uninstalled, but PDN remained over many PCs over the past 10 + years or so.

For localised editing, I still use Nikon's really old, and discontinued CaptureNX2. I like the colour control point method of editing(it's equivalent to 'point and shoot').

Nikon's newest software ViewNX-i and CaptureNX-D have been a backward step(on my PCs) in terms of usability and ability. I don't like either of them. I have them installed, and very occasionally I use CNX-D, but it's woefully slow and painful to edit with.
In terms of speed(of doing stuff and viewing images) my primary software are: ViewNX2, Faststone FSViewer, and CaptureNX2.
I also recently got DxO's Photolab too, as it also uses colour control point editing, and it's not as quick as any of those software on D800 files.

Oh! and I assume you're looking for freeware/free/open source software too .. none of this pay for proprietary stuff!

Snooks
28-10-2018, 5:05pm
@AK83

I think my problems are that I know what I want to do but get lost doing them. The names of features are not what I expect or want them to be. I just get confused and carppy on both GIOMP and PS when I had that a very long time ago.

I downloaded the NIkon software. One of them was only a viewer and no good for me at all. That is the one I had twice previously but the software is not for what I need anyway.

They other one I have retained and yes, you do WB and the basics first and then convert to TIFF for the finishing in GIMP so it should be ok once I get accustomed. But I still have to seriously address my lack of skills in GIMP.

My PC is a desktop, think its 3.2 Dual Core with a 1TB Hard Disc. I run 8G of RAM but really would like 16G. I normally work in Firefox so I can used some addons I have used for many years.

I think that any issues at my end are MY issues and not the tools. I just need practise, which I am doing and having fun doing so..... it's just a very big learning curve. But I am getting there and will get there ! Just not as fast as I would like (lol).

Cheers.

ameerat42
28-10-2018, 5:13pm
I went mad and located some interesting free sample NEFs to practise using Capture NXD.
A bit of mucking around and I should be okay with it.

Just saw that the particular shot was done using Adobe RGB and I was wondering how to save
it using sRGB in the raw converter. At present I tell P'shop to ignore or convert it to sRGB.

- - - Updated - - -

I was answering AK's post and then saw Snooks'. You are right, Snooks, about the learning curve.

You're new to photography, but I guess newer to image editing (even though you have shown a
good bit of prowess here). So I guess you will have to ask as you go along. After a while it'll start
to hang together more.

Anyway, this addition to the post is to reinforce the idea of sticking with Capture NXD.

arthurking83
31-10-2018, 10:35am
....

I downloaded the NIkon software. One of them was only a viewer and no good for me at all. That is the one I had twice previously but the software is not for what I need anyway.

.....

"Only a viewer" .. dunno this one(maybe I do, but have avoided it).

Remember the names: (and in order of preference for use)

ViewNX2 (https://downloadcenter.nikonimglib.com/en/download/sw/20.html) in terms of Nikon software, #1.
I've done some how to's on using Capture NX2 and ViewNX2 somewhere around here.

CaptureNX-D (https://downloadcenter.nikonimglib.com/en/download/sw/118.html) in terms of Nikon software, pretty crappy, but handy to have. The very latest version(v1.15.) is the only one that that's worth the effort.
The reason for this is the return of colour control point editing.

ViewNX-i, in terms of software from any vendor, crappy and should be made illegal! :p (hence why I didn't provide the download link).


.... The names of features are not what I expect or want them to be. I just get confused and carppy on both GIOMP and PS when I had that a very long time ago.

....

Makes perfectly good sense, and the reason for your accurate assessment is that they are totally different types of programs.
GIMP and Ps are pixel generators .. ie. you can make an image out of nothing other than lots of patience and an idea using those two programs.

ViewNX2(and CNX-D) are raw converter programs. They specialise in one thing only, which is to convert a non image file(NEF) into an image file(more generally usable), which will be jpg or tif.
Using Ps or GIMP, you can't directly open a raw file(maybe DNG in Ps, but even that I think needs a raw converter too!).
By the same token you can't save an edited image in GIMP or Ps, into a raw file.

CNX-D(and CaptureNX2) are a little GIMP/Ps style in that they can edit pixels too, but more accurately they edit raw data on an NEF file. You then still need to convert it to an image file.

The issue with your quoted text is simply familiarity. Been there, done that. We're not born with the ability to use software out of the box, just as with anything else in life.
Took me far longer to realise I had no hope of ever learning to use Ps in my lifetime, so chose CaptureNX2 as my editor of choice. I like the 'babysteps' method of using colour control points.
Fumbled around lots at first(learning curve), making massive mistakes, but all easily and non destructively undoable.
Over time, it became natural to do.

Snooks
31-10-2018, 10:57am
Hi AK83 :)


"Only a viewer" .. dunno this one(maybe I do, but have avoided it).

I may have been confused with the one that I thought was only a viewer. But I know that both did not do what i expected, which was pretty much to be an editor like Gimp, Paint etc. I mean, you cant even rotate an image.

It was my fault and totally because i expected something it was not designed to do. I use the ViewNX2 to edit raw files for colour, saturation etc and then when its acceptable for needs i change to .tiff as advised by the forum and take that into Gimp.

So I think we have a happy compromise. Thanks for confirming all that, like i said, i probably explained it incorrectly.

Cheers :)

ameerat42
31-10-2018, 11:05am
Snooks. That's what I do with my Σ files - as much as possible for tones and colours in Sigma Photo Pro,
then the rest as you describe in Photoshop (or GIMP if you have that).

Although the likes of Adobe Lightroom let you do more - possibly as much as as Capture NXD - both these
sometimes require you to save as something and use something else.

arthurking83
02-11-2018, 7:21am
.... I use the ViewNX2 to edit raw files for colour, saturation etc and then when its acceptable for needs i change to .tiff as advised by the forum and take that into Gimp.

....

:th3:

Now! be mindful that even tho you have a 1Tb drive, and it may seem like a lot(which it is), and your workflow is pretty much ideal * ... it's not without some issues.
Tif files are huge, and 1Tb with that workflow over the course of a few thousand images may end up coming unstuck. This won't be a problem now, but will be in the future.
nor I or yourself could define a certain date deadline, as your time and commitment to capturing images will change over time.

eg. say you shoot 10K images this year, don't assume you will do the same next year, it most likely will be more, could easily be less.
But 1Tb on the basis of using a D200 I'd guess that around 50K images using that workflow method should be your upper limit, and you should be considering more space, and or more effective image management and storage.
If you happen to add a new camera body into your system, and it has a larger Mp count, then this would reduce that 50K raw file count above.

I'm assuming that this 1Tb drive is the only drive in the desktop?, so allowances need to be made for all other PC operations AND to never fill a drive. My self enforced upper limit for a spinning drive(ie. non SSD) is 80% capacity.
So, at some point, you may start thinking that additional HDDs may be required to separate image files from all other PC data.
I do this on two separate drives on my PC, one for current year images(SSD) and also one remote USB drive with all my images.
If you value your images(and I'd reckon that at some point in the future you WILL end up valuing them more than you do now!) you probably want a backup of your image store too.

* I used the term "pretty much ideal" earlier as for most intents and purposes in terms of quality, that workflow is ideal. But! it's wasteful of HDD space.
Even tho the saying is that storage is cheap(ie. just get bigger drives) I still think that point of view is the wrong way to approach the issue. Having a more efficient storage system is a better way to manage storage space.

So, while tif is a good quality format(and I used it too early on), the reason you want it for now, is that your experience level is 'beginner'. That is, you're still finding your photographic feet. You don't yet know, what you probably want out of an image. Experience is that you don't know how to get to that point with the editing ... yet. It'll all come .. the more you do, the easier it will come. (as I said earlier in the thread .. been there cone that, and I reckon most everyone has).
So as your experience in editing increases(you probably won't even realise that it's increasing), at some point you may go back to your earliest images and think to yourself .. "what tha!!" .. was I thinking when I edited that.
This is why the 'quality' workflow may be important. You may want to go back over your early images and re do them. You won't need to ask how I know this. ;)

So you want the quality(for posterity) but maintain that quality will have it's drawbacks(in terms of HDD space).
So in the long run, tif will be the wrong format to use!

This is what I did way back. I don't edit jpgs(I delete them where I find them on my PC). I can't just wholesale delete them all off my PC, as I have many images in that format only, so have to be weary of what I delete, but as I sift through my images and I find old jpgs of raw files I have, they get deleted. jpg is only useful just to display them to those folks you feel the need too(ie. here and or friends, etc.)

So my editing format is NEF. I do the occasional tif(very rarely) say if I'm doing a panorama, but if Nikon software created panoramas and maintaining the NEF format, I'd use NEF for that too.
But in terms of space.
You have 10-12Mb NEF files, convert that to a tiff, and it becomes a 40-ish Mb tiff. The issue is, you don't(EVER) want to delete the 'keeper' NEF files. These are your 'life savings'. You delete the edited tiff files and jpg files.
You can always remake them if needed, but you can never remake an NEF file you've deleted.
So keeping the NEF and keeping the tif then gives you the problem that the original 10-12Mb NEF's storage space will become more like 50-ish Mb if you keep the edited tif file too.
deleting the edited tif file, means you no longer have the high quality edited file. so if at any point in the future you want to remake that file again, you need to re edit the NEF all over again.

Why I recommend using Nikon's software! In saying that, you don't get 'real' cloning, and you can't add other skies into other foregrounds. ie. it's not a pixel making editor, it's a photo tweaking editor.
That is, Nikon's software in a sense forces you to shoot the image as well as you can 'in camera'(or close to it). Some aspects of physics you just can't defy, like dynamic range, and stuff like that. So almost all images need some kind of tweaking.

This is why I suggested to 'stick with' the horrible CaptureNX-D too. This software is more intricate than ViewNX2.
CNX-D won't do sky changes, or clone out stuff in an image(it's cloning is limited to removing dust spots, and it's bad at that simple job too! :rolleyes:), but it allows brightening just the flower and not the background, or the cocky and not the forground .. etc. (ie. localised editing).
But, remember it's a photographers editor, not a pixel making editor.

Theres a benefit of editing the NEF file too, and it's non destructive, so you may read inane comments from those that don't know, that "you should never edit the original raw file" ignore those comments. Those folks don't know.
Anyhow, the benefit of edting the NEF file in Nikon's software is that you don't need 4 x larger tif files. You only have those 10-12Mb NEF files to store.
Put another way:
That 1Tb drive in your PC, you should really try not to use more than about half that space for images. Assuming it's the only drive of course. PC needs space for other things too!.
SO lets assume you limit the 1Tb to 500Gb, with the 'tif file workflow' this gives you about 10K images (500Gb divided by 50Mb total storage per image).
Just using the NEF file editing method tho, that 500Gb allows you 50K images.
All numbers are approximate, just to give you a heads up on how storage can be 'problematic'

Imagine, or do the actual sums) on how many images you reckon you may shoot per year.
I used to shoot about 10-15K per year, keep about 10K, did that for a good 10 years .. I was out'n'about basically every day, one of life's advantages with the work I used to do.
That all changed, but the point is still the same.
Say you shot 10K images per year: you'd need to update that 1Tb drive to another one, or a larger one, basically every couple of years if you used this 'tif file editing method'.
If you used the NEF file editing method, you probably wouldn't need a larger than 1Tb drive for close to 10 years.

Guess what I worked out was the best way to edit my images about 10 years ago! ;)

Also note, I have cheated a bit too: I do use CNX-D a little here and there, and it bugs the bejeesuz out of me. I primarily use Capture NX2, which is more like GIMP/Ps, but still not a 'pixel editor'.
It's advantage is that it works a lot better, and has some(very few) additional fancy features over CNX-D.
You can't get NCX2 any longer(it's discontinued).
When I get a new camera(model), I won't be able to use CNX2 with those files again, I HAVE to switch to CNX-D at some point.

Funny thing! .. I have about 20+ Tb of total storage capacity at my disposal(10+ if I do redundancy), and am currently at about 2-3Tb, so I got nothing to worry about. But still contemplate the future.

ameerat42
02-11-2018, 8:45am
:th3:

Now! be mindful that even tho you have a 1Tb drive, and it may seem like a lot(which it is), and your workflow is pretty much ideal * ... it's not without some issues.
...

I'm assuming that this 1Tb drive is the only drive in the desktop?, so allowances need to be made for all other PC operations AND to never fill a drive. My self enforced upper limit for a spinning drive(ie. non SSD) is 80% capacity...

So, at some point, you may start thinking that additional HDDs may be required to separate image files from all other PC data...
If you value your images(and I'd reckon that at some point in the future you WILL end up valuing them more than you do now!) you probably want a backup of your image store too.
...



Snooks. AK makes some valid points above, which you should re-/read a few times.
On the issue of storage I have isolated some of his points and will add my own.

For people who do photography - and not excluding those who generate lots of data from their pursuits - the idea
of a single physical drive in a computer, even if it is partitioned into other drives, can become risky for maintaining
that data.

In other words: you need a backup system!
This can be simple and modest in cost, like an external HDD to which you regularly copy your files; or elaborate,
like a RAID array.

The reasons you need a backup system:
1) As a single drive containing both OS and data files become filled, operations slow down. And, it is my
opinion that the bigger the drive, the slower it gets.
2) If the single drive fails, your data will be lost at worst, or very expensive to retrieve if it can be.
3) Portability.

Data loss stings! - It is something like being robbed - but worse, by yourself :eek:

What you need to back up:
1) Your original images (obviously the ones you don't delete straight away) such as raws or SOOC jpegs.
2) The final worked versions of these images.

Example of a simple backup system (as I use):
- At any one time, a single 1TB external HDD (ie, a spinning disk type, not an SSD).
- This is connected to the computer via USB3 - all recent USB drives are USB3. If your computer has a USB3
port, you will typically get read rates of 100MB(ytes, not bits) per second.
- Finally, files go onto this as "Original raw + final full-size jpeg". The names I use are just the original image name from the
camera, like SDIM3456... An occasional a, b, c or other short descriptor might feature. The containing folder is typically named
with the date and subject. Intermediate, small sized versions for posting here are usually kept somewhere else until posted.

...And finally, those folders will get copied onto yet another like drive. After that, if the world ends, too bad!

Typical cheap external > 1 TB < HDDs:
WD Passport or Elements (~$100 or $70)
Toshiba Canvio ($69)
(Other brands like Seagate)

My reliability experience: WD Passport OK but failed eventually; Elements still going; Toshiba Canvio (several) still going after years!
Seagate: though not external but full size internal, all failed with data loss, so I nevva! get them anymore.:rolleyes:

These are available from the likes of JB HiFi and Officeworks.

My advice: Go to Officeworks and get yourself 1 or 2 1TB (not 2TB) of the Toshiba Canvio drives for $69 - NOT the slightly dearer
ones with some unnecessary backup software that takes up space anyway.

The thing, is it does me.

John King
02-11-2018, 12:27pm
Snooks, I cannot agree too strongly with the practical advice from Am.

Having too much backup is like having too many friends, or too much good health ...

I have an OS drive (SSD), 2x 3TB and 1x 2B internal HDDs (plus another smaller internal HDD that has an image of my OS drive on it - SSDs usually fail catastrophically, with no warning and no hope of recovery).

For external HDDs, I have 1x 2TB external, 1x 3TB external, and 1x 1TB portable plus 1x 2TB portable. The latter lives in my camera bag, and contains not only all my image files, but also all document, accounting and email data files as well.

HDDs are cheap. Data is usually irreplaceable ...

Snooks
03-11-2018, 12:14am
I agree totally with the comments about backups being essential. At the moment I don't really have many (any) photos that I would be upset to lose, only a few which are backed up onto flikr.

I do actually dabble in building websites, having originally owned the largest Darts Shop (online) in the country, but I sold that a few years back when I was ill. I still own a couple of websites and build a few here and there for people and as such, have learnt the hard way how vital backups are.

My server has secure storage space and plenty of room so I will end up putting a partition in there totally for safe storage of images and then just run a cron job every night to backup all files. That way I can't forget :)

But thank you for taking the time to mention these very important points. :)