russelray wrote:
You do realize, though, that a great many cameras can do post-processing? My little Canon 760D has all sorts of interesting stuff under the Menu item "Creative filters": Grainy B/W, Soft focus, Fish-eye effect, Art bold effect, Water painting effect (my favorite), Toy camera effect, Miniature effect. And one can use one creative filter, save the result, and then apply another creative filter.
In addition to that, under the Menu item "Picture Style," one can set Auto, Standard, Portrait, Landscape, Neutral, Faithful, Monochrome, User Def. 1, User Def. 2, and User Def. 3. Then, under those settings, one can set the Sharpness (0 to 7), Contrast (-4 to +4), Saturation (-4 to +4), and Color tone (-4 to +4).
I also want to create the best, but what does "created in camera" and "not created in camera" mean? I think one also would need to identify the camera in addition to the various settings because the software engineers at Nikon are different from the software engineers at Canon, and the software engineers working on the Canon 760D probably are different from the software engineers working on the Canon 1D. Thus, the product of those engineers' software programming is different. That's why we have different RAW files—NEF, CR2, etc. Heck, even Adobe, a non-camera manufacturer, has gotten into the middle of things with their RAW DNG format.
You do realize, though, that a great many cameras ... (
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I think when one talks about in camera one means natural capture not special filter effects I’m speaking to when cameras didn’t have auto or effects in camera what I’m referring to is you set asa (iso)load your film and process your film as desired in wet trays process your print with filters burning and dodging as needed fix and wash your print that’s what photographers did back than