Saturday, June 30, 2012

digital camra storage: jpg or tiff?

In which format does my camera store pictures?

Pocket cameras store pictures in usually these two formats:
TIFF: This is a very high quality format of photos, but the picture takes a lot of memory. A usual 5 MP picture in TIFF format can be of about 15 megabites -  a very big file size to handle. Because of this, many pocket cameras do not have the option to save files in TIFF format.
JPEG or JPG: This is the most common format in which pocket cameras – and also PCs and websites -  keep pictures. The camera converts the big picture into a small .jpg picture through a ‘lossy’ compression. In most cases, howev er, the loss is not of much impact.

Some manufacturers keep their pictures in their proprietary formats, but that is mostly with high-end cameras.

Nowadays, .jpg is the standard format in which most pocket cameras keep photos. If your camera gives you the option to keep photos in formats other than .jpg, go for .jpg only. In case you want to go for other formats, consider this: (i) Photos  in TIFF or other formats such as RAW and NEF will usually take more space on the camera memory or the memory-card / memory stick. So, you will be able to take fewer photos if you don’t have enough memory available on camera or cards / sticks etc; and (ii) The photos in formats other than JPG will be of higher intrinsic quality. If you later edit the photo on a professional photo editing software, you will get better results from a TIFF photo than a JPG.

One word of caution about handling JPG files: If you load a .jpg picture from your camera into a picture viewing program and then close it, no harm done. However, if you save it again, chances are that the software compresses the file further and there is more loss in quality. With one or two such actions, the picture’s quality may become perceptibly poor. So, (i) Do not edit the original file but take a copy and edit it; (ii) check the compression setting on the picture viewing program at the time of saving a .jpg file.

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