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Dylan & Marianne
12-08-2012, 1:55pm
I was just wondering how many of you work in 16 bit before converting back down to 8 bit for output (web jpeg or printing)
The reason I ask is that someone has recently brought it up on another forum and was strongly advocating working in 16 bit though I've had my doubts.
I don't disagree that issues like banding and colour handling are better in 16 bit. In fact, I used to work in 16 bit all the time (as indicated by my out dated signature)

My main reservation is that in the past, I distantly recall that on the final conversion, it can (though rarely) introduce some artefacts.
As a result, I changed my workflow a long time ago to just work in 8 bit from the start so that I'll know what I'll be dealing with at the end rather than having to fix a 'nasty surprise' on the final conversion.
Is my memory playing tricks on me? Does a final conversion from 16bit to 8bit do anything to the image that's untoward (eg introduce banding) ?

I appreciate the theory behind the 16bit argument but I wasn't strongly convinced to keep doing it from past experiences since the final file will always be an 8 bit one.
Love to hear your experiences regarding this topic ?

ameerat42
12-08-2012, 2:15pm
Sometimes, depending on what I can't do in raw and as an 8-bit. I haven't noticed any banding that resulted from the conversions back and forth.
Am.

William
12-08-2012, 2:26pm
Not very informative answer from me Dylan, But I have processed both and have'nt noticed a change , I process at 8bit now all the time , I could do a couple of tests on some of my recent Sunrise shots , I noticed some colour banding coming in , I could reprocess one or two from RAW at 16bit and see what happens

PS : But I'll still have to convert to 8bit in the end :Doh:

Dylan & Marianne
12-08-2012, 3:01pm
i might try a direct side by side processing of 8 and 16 bit versions of the same file and see what happens I guess
- thanks for the replies!

Xenedis
12-08-2012, 3:37pm
I always work in 16-bit mode.

I cannot say I've been tempted to tr working in 8-bit mode, even though the final JPG will be an 8-bit image.

I use Photoshop's native PSD format, and in my PSD files (which I keep in 16-bit mode), I have all my layers and the maximum bit depth. I consider my PSD files my blueprints, so I prefer to preserve the best quality there, and then produce JPGs as required or desirable.

I have never compared bit modes when processing, but by very nature of coverting to JPG, you're introducing pixel destruction anyway.

Cris
12-08-2012, 3:38pm
I have wondered this myself and would be interested in your findings-Thanks:)

etherial
12-08-2012, 5:37pm
I always work in 16bit as well, always thought it was better to work with the best file you could for as long as you could (ie until whichever output). I'd be interested in the comparison.

WhoDo
12-08-2012, 5:53pm
When working exclusively in GIMP, I had no choice but to work in 8-bit colour from go to whoa. It wasn't uncommon to end up with images that were colour banded, especially in areas of distinct transition as around a sunset. The blues of the sky would be smooth but the transition of the yellows and oranges around the sun would separate and leave the result looking pretty tatty when going for higher contrast.

Now that I use LR4.1 for 99% of what I do, I work exclusively in 16-bit colour and the results are so much better. The only time I am forced to drop back to 8-bit colour depth is if I want to perform some layering in PSE that requires 8-bit colour mode. Can't understand why they do that, but I'm sure there's a good reason.

Bottom line, Dylan, is why throw away 75% of your colour information if you don't have to? Sure, if you're only publishing to the web in JPG then you are going to have to drop a lot of colour data at the end of the process, so working at that level all the way through is probably worthwhile so you know what you're getting. OTOH, if you're going for prints with full colour profiles then you should make sure you've got as much colour data as possible IMHO. Subtlety in colour is easily lost, especially when going a bit heavy-handed on the saturation. That won't matter unless you print big and your viewer's are discerning. JMHO of course. :confused013

Update: I thought you might appreciate this assessment of the value of lossy vs. lossless compression for web images (http://www.wfu.edu/~matthews/misc/jpg_vs_gif/JpgCompTest/index.html). It shows just how much colour information can be sacrificed by a lossy compression algorithm like JPG. If you're already going to lose some colour data, wouldn't you prefer that to be the LAST thing you lose before publishing, just to ensure you have the most possible data for the compression algorithm to work from? Personally, I'd prefer it if PNG, a lossless compression, became the standard. When JPG was devised there were heavy restrictions on bandwidth for web publication. That is no longer true; and a PNG image uncompresses to the identical data of the original while a JPG does not so why not take advantage of the improved bandwidth to display richer images?

Lance B
12-08-2012, 5:59pm
I always work in 16bit until the final upload image for web. The reason being, you never know what you're going to do with the TIFF file as you may want to print big or whatever.

Warbler
12-08-2012, 6:37pm
I always edit in 16-bit. When you're doing some editing like selective levels work, if you're in 8-bit, you'll notice the histogram chunking up more than if you do the same in 16-bit. I equate this to using a fine grate and a coarse grate. Rub your cheese against the coarse grate and lots more of the cheese has to be moved to the nearest hole than being able to pass through its own hole on the fine grate. Alter the values of your pixels and they have to fit a coarser colour profile. There are less values available in 8-bit than are available in 16-bit. You still have to bring it down to 8-bit to save as jpeg, but you're not rounding already rounded numbers. The more editing you do, the greater the effect. The worst effect of this is colour banding which I'm sure we've all seen at one time or another.

Of course you may not notice a difference in side-by-side comparisons, but different image content with be affected differently. From a purely personal anecdotal experience. I notice the tools in PS seem to have a different "sensitivity" when applied to JPEG than they do a 16-bit PSD file.

Dylan & Marianne
12-08-2012, 7:21pm
guys, can I say that I don't doubt 16bit is better to work in - but there you have it , a beautiful 16 bit image that needs to be converted to any kind of output (unless there are 16 bit compatible printers out there?)
my real question was whether the edits in 16 bit hold up when in the end, for any kind of output, you need to sample back down to 8 bit - something I have to try out as I am now comfortable with working in 8 bit (banding and artefact introduced means I know I should either try to correct it or ease back on the PP - if the downsampling is the last step, then the last thing I want to have to do is do add more PP steps)

ameerat42
12-08-2012, 7:27pm
(Ult., it's about what you're trying to achieve from what you've got. I doubt if there will ever be a definitive and general answer to the question as posed, because the very Q covers a very wide range of conditions. That is, there's no single answer to a host of (implicit) questions.)
Just a thought.
PS: As posed, it was 16-bit vs 8-bit"

I @ M
12-08-2012, 7:27pm
guys, can I say that I don't doubt 16bit is better to work in - but there you have it , a beautiful 16 bit image that needs to be converted to any kind of output (unless there are 16 bit compatible printers out there?)


Dylan, I think that part sums it up.

Many commercial printers ask for JPEG files which are by default 8 bit and those that like to receive TIFF files ask for them in 8 bit -----

Dylan & Marianne
12-08-2012, 7:44pm
thanks Am an Andrew -the printer we've been using for years always used to covert the 16bit files to 8bit anyway which greatly influenced the change in our workflow to all 8 bit
however, I am tempted to go back to editing in 16bit if I find that I can do cleaner edits which don't lose their fidelity on the last step of downsampling - just have to push some limits when I get a spare moment to compare the differences.
Ps. everyone else who has mentioned their experiences with 16 bit, I agree with you - there really isn't a reason to work in 8 bit in terms of quality of the edit - it's the final 8 bit product I was more asking about via the 2 pathways (sorry if that was't clear in the opening post)

WhoDo
12-08-2012, 8:13pm
it's the final 8 bit product I was more asking about via the 2 pathways (sorry if that was't clear in the opening post)

No, Dylan, it was clear. It's just that the question is a loaded one. That's why I posted the link to the various compression algorithms and their uses. I can't understand why professional photography printers would want to take 8-bit JPG (a lossy compression) if they want to be proud of the results they can produce. Far better to request a lossless compression; either lossless TIFF or PNG, and know they are reproducing what the photographer captured in total. They've got to expect the colour variations demonstrated in that link to result in a poorer product from the photographer's perspective, surely. :confused013

Mark L
12-08-2012, 9:37pm
.... I can't understand why professional photography printers would want to take 8-bit JPG (a lossy compression) if they want to be proud of the results they can produce. ...

Sorry to side track, but how many professional photography printers accept anything else, and if they don't .........?

Kym
12-08-2012, 9:48pm
Speaking from a IT perspective there is a principle that applies here...

Keep as much data for as long as possible! Once its gone you can't get it back.

This applies to transactional systems as much as imaging systems.

Personally I keep my original raw images in Lightroom,
then significant edits in PSD (usually smaller than TIFF, complete with layers),
and only output 8bit JPEG for we or print as needed.

I don't always edit in Photoshop, so most of my edits are LR only, which is the raw + the sidecar file, i.e. very small.

There is NO point in going from 8 bit back to 16 -- you have already lost information and the resultant 16 bit is at best an approximation.

Dylan & Marianne
13-08-2012, 5:54am
Mark, mine accepts 8 bit TIFFs which is the reason why i work in that format from the start
I can only rely on anecdote from distant memory which led me to believe that the 16->8bit TIFF sometimes resulted in changes but if there isn't, there is no question for me to be going back to working in 16 bit since I've had a pc upgrade in between too!
edit: I don't ditch my RAWS either - they sit there waiting for a rainy day in the future for re-edits lol - I consider them to be my base file and not the PSD as I find I'll often edit images quite differently and would need a very big server if every edited file retained all of its layers in 16 bit!

ricktas
13-08-2012, 6:25am
So say in 12 months time the printing industry starts to move to 16 bit printing. Do you then re-edit your RAW files to create 16 bit versions, or will you leave your older photos in 8bit and change your processing to 16bit at that time?

For me it is called future proofing. I will edit in 16 bit mode. I save a full 16bit file and then I reduce the size and save as jpg. Once uploaded to wherever, the jpg version gets deleted. Seems to me almost everyone posting in this thread is trying to justify their own PP methodology, 8bit / 16bit do it whichever way you want. Neither is wrong, neither is right, they are just different.

My printer is happy to take 16bit TIF files. Gets the results I want, even if they downsize them to 8bit to print them.

Dylan & Marianne
13-08-2012, 6:35am
To answer your question rick, I would reedit from the RAW (also, because the image is already ready in 8 bit form, I'm already happy with its final result so the fact that the printer now offers 16 bit won't influence the editing that's already gone by unless there were correctable flaws to do with bit sampling ?)
Whenever we'e had new exhibitions and I want to do up an old photo, I rarely go back to the already edited TIFF because I've usually had a new vision for the image
Having said that, we do have a 'print ready' folder for specific size and mediums ( ie different sharpening , different vibrance and brightness etc)
I'd hope that in 12 months , I'd be printing new images and not old ones hehe
ps. I am trying to be objective with the discussion since everyone seems to be quite polarised but only a few people have answered the specific question I had - and that is that it seems few people have had a problem downsampling from 16 to 8 bit so I think I'll switch back to my original workflow!

EDIT: exceptions would be exposure blend images and panoramas - its too painful to go back from scratch unless I spot a major problem!

ricktas
13-08-2012, 6:52am
I think it also depends on what you did in the past then. With my D200 banding in the sky was easy to bring out, so I stuck with 16 bit cause it proved more beneficial at that time, and lessened the chance of the banding that would appear in 8 bit. I have never really tried 8 bit with the D3, but it would probably handle it better due to the better sensor tech to begin with.

Ms Monny
13-08-2012, 7:48am
The only time I am forced to drop back to 8-bit colour depth is if I want to perform some layering in PSE that requires 8-bit colour mode. Can't understand why they do that, but I'm sure there's a good reason.


I am always peeved that when I go to PSE, it makes me change my mode from 16bit to 8bit. Now after reading what you put up, Dylan, i am not that fussed it is in 8bit. Does anyone know why PSE works in only 8bit??? I thought it was a setting I accidentally changed and I didn't know how to change it back! :o

arthurking83
13-08-2012, 10:18pm
Firstly if you don't push your processing too far(to cause banding, or posterisation) then there's nothing wrong with 8bit processing


..... Does anyone know why PSE works in only 8bit??? I thought it was a setting I accidentally changed and I didn't know how to change it back! :o

obviously it has everything to do with money .. $$ kachung! $$ and intended target market that the software is aimed at.

PSE is more targetted towards the hobbyist enthusiast starting out image manipulation person, whereas full blown CS versions are targeted towards the pro serious enthusiast!

PSE can come bundled with many hardware devices and types(scanners cameras etc), whereas CS (that I know of) doesn't really come bundled with much hardware(it comes bundled with the very high end $10K Leica M range cameras).

They(Adobe) basically want you to spend more money for these features.

Dylan & Marianne
16-08-2012, 6:12am
This week I've been playing around editing images with alot of plain skies
I've found (not surprisingly) that the banding is much better handled in 16 bit
AND
on the last step converting back to 8 bit, I haven't yet come across any nasty surprises of artefact being reintroduced
makes me wonder what happened a few years ago that made me change workflow lol - I guess that's what happens when decisions are made based on anecdote rather than consideration
I'm going back to my original workflow methinks!

ricktas
16-08-2012, 6:38am
If you shoot in RAW then you have the choice to go back and edit in 16 bit or 8 bit..again..and again..and again. Shoot in JPG and you only have 8 bit.

I think everyone just needs to do what works for them. There is not a 'correct' method, just different ones.

Dylan & Marianne
16-08-2012, 10:42am
+1 for RAW hehe

arthurking83
16-08-2012, 3:05pm
......
makes me wonder what happened a few years ago that made me change workflow lol - I guess that's what happens when decisions are made based on anecdote rather than consideration
I'm going back to my original workflow methinks!

Changed PC, or screen? .. or any other component?

fishographer
16-08-2012, 3:16pm
Since I have been shooting RAW I have edited in full 16bit format mainly as I was of the understanding that Canon, at least the 7D, produced 14bit RAW images and dropping to 8bit to edit lost me way too much latitude in editing due to a reduction in the number in brightness levels.

I cant say that I have ever noticed any major issues in workflow however I dont think I have used it enough to really be an expert.

I PP in both Camera RAW and CS4, depending on what I am doing, as a 16bit image and save as a PS file as is and only ever drop down to 8bit when producing a jpeg for web display purposes.......haven't really printed anything much out at this stage so I cant really comment much on that aspect.

I cant say I have ever noticed any artifacts in the images spat out at 8bit but I dont think I have ever looked that hard either as I am only ever doing them for website displays and I am sure there are plenty of image quality changes that happen when they are uploaded to various websites.

As Rick suggests there probably isnt one right or wrong way of doing it, all comes down to what you want to produce in the end.....but still probably doesnt answer your original question does it Dylan...:cool:

Dylan & Marianne
16-08-2012, 3:47pm
fish - I reckon I've answered my own question for my purposes though I don't think I can speak on behalf of everyone else :P
Arthur - New PC , same monitor, 5dmk2 + 40D initially - now 5mkd2 and 5dmk3, and generally more experience which also helps make objective decisions and not snap judgements

arthurking83
16-08-2012, 6:21pm
.....
Arthur - New PC , same monitor, 5dmk2 + 40D initially - now 5mkd2 and 5dmk3, and generally more experience which also helps make objective decisions and not snap judgements

Hardware can still make a difference to tho.
Highly unlikely but it could have been a graphics card/chip issue as well, so you eye's may not have been deceiving you.

ATM I'm currently running an onboard graphics chip(Radeon/AMD) instead of my original nVidia card.
There is definitely a clear disadvantage in having done this, so I will go back to the graphics card option one day soon.
BUT! I'm not 100% sure which way to go, whether I go with a Radeon card or an nVidia card.
I had troubles getting the nVidia card to load the colour profile generated by my ICM software(BasICColor), where every now and then it just wouldn't load the profile it was supposed too.
The Radeon chip does so flawlessly tho, and I'm hoping that my current lower quality display is a cause of the low end chip used for graphics.
I'm thinking that the Radeon driver is more compatible with the colour management software, whereas the nVidia driver may have been more demanding.
My colour accuracy and display quality is now much further off than it ever was with the nVidia card and it's plainly obvious with more noticable posterisation(banding) even on very minimally edited images displaying as my rotating desktop images.
My desktop images are saved to the native screen res, and at 100% quality, and my editing software only allows for 16 bit mode only.
Images can be converted to 8 bit tiffs, but you don't have an option for editing tiffs in either 16bit or 8bit for arguments sake, they're edited in the bit mode they're saved in(but can be converted either way).

Dylan & Marianne
16-08-2012, 8:07pm
I'm not sure if I Can help you much though I can agree with you that when I edit on my PC which has a radeon card, the colours handling seems better (for lack of a more techinical description)
On the laptops we own, they all have nvidia cards and seem to accentuate greens and reduce magentas which makes editing on those a nightmare - and the colours aren't easily adjustable ;(