Snapseed android app resizing12/28/2023 ![]() well then for a start you won't be processing RAW anywhere (let alone on your phone) and if you were an occasional RAW shooter, specifically setting RAW for a shot here and there then some of the issues raised won't effect you either. This preference shapes my thinking in the following workflows (for reasons which will become clear). If for some bizzare reason I wanted something that looked like that (usually inferior) Out Of Camera JPG image, I'd still convert my RAW file using any number of tools that I have available and just get a better image anyway. Thus resizing down from 12 or more MegaPixels was what I ended up doing with JPG's Its smaller but I've never found myself wanting to make a big print from an out of camera JPG, 99% of the time what I want with JPG's is to Facebook, email to friends or the blog here. I normally don't bother with the JPG because all RAW files have a JPG in them and if I want JPG then I'll just pull that. I normally have my camera set to RAW only. I guess that I should start out with some basic assumptions I have. So keep this in mind as it does not facilitate other operations (like file copying). It will also make a TIFF and a JPG (if you didn't already have that). Read this post about that process.īack to the app, as the name of the app implies its intention is to make an Adobe DNG file from your Cameras native RAW file. I wanted to see if the noisy results I got from my phone was because of the phone sensor (which I assumed it would be). To understand that I took some RW2 images from my Panasonic GF1, converted them to DNG and then transferred to the phone. Recently I wrote up my findings of using Snapseed and an app for Android called raw2dng ( here), which extended the ability I'd already found (but was a bit pointless) when having a look at how well Snapseed actually processed the files.
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