| Hi Bob,
As I wrote, I shoot in RAW for planned shoots and JPEG for snaps (family, holiday, parties, etc.). Basically, it's RAW when I know I'm going to do post-processing (ie. I've planned to) and JPEG for the rest.
RAW+JPEG is a good idea when you're not sure or just to be safe and have the best possible quality in the RAW just in case, but access to the JPEG that's ready to share as is. It all depends on what you shot and your post workflow. |