drcolyn
Contributor
I know this may be a dumb question but please bear with me.
I was looking for some macro images to see what detail the G10 is capable of capturing and came across this article by Carl Chapman who did a sharpness experiment because he noticed the RAW images on his Canon G10 looked less sharp than those taken with his Canon 750IS.
He realised the following:
The difference was due to looking at both the images on the cameras LCD. The 750IS image was already JPEG and the G10s RAW image was unprocessed. Processing the RAW image in Photoshop provides a result that is equivalent to, if not slightly sharper than the in-camera processed shot.
Now my question is do I have to get software like photoshop (and at what price) before I can view the raw images on my PC or is there complimentary Canon software that will at least allow me to save the images in jpeg? My laptop is a 2003 Compaq with XP Home and I definitely did not budget to upgrade that as well or buy photoshop software.
Here is the whole article for those that are interested
Canon G10 Sharpness Experiment Posted on July 18, 2009
I was looking through a few images the other day and noticed the RAW images from my Canon G10 looked less sharp than those taken with my Canon 750IS. I was a bit concerned as it had recently been repaired so I decided to do an experiment, which taught me a couple of interesting things about the camera. I used a PADI underwater greyscale slate that was lying around as a target. The target was placed in a low light environment to push the camera to the limits, and simulate underwater environment.
A tripod was setup for the cameras, and testing was done with each camera 20cm (macro mode) and 1.5m (non-macro mode) from the target to simulate near and far environments.
Test 1 JPEG to JPEG
The 750 only outputs JPEG images, so for my first test I set both cameras as:-
20cm from the target
widest zoom
macro mode
JPEG output
IS OFF
10 second timer. (The ten second timer was used to help reduce any vibration from pushing the shutter button, as I did not have a remote cable for either camera.)
Image 1
There is little detectable difference in image sharpness between the two cameras at 1:1 magnification. (They have slightly different zoom factors so are not quite aligned in lightroom).
I was happy with this as it indicated nothing had happened to the G10 during the repair.
Test 2 RAW vs JPEG
So if my camera was producing sharp images in JPEG, was there a difference with RAW as I had been seeing. To test this I compared the JPEG and RAW version (produced in the camera) of the same picture from the G10.
The test settings were:-
20cm from the target
widest zoom
macro mode
IS OFF
10 second timer.
Image 2
You can see from the comparison above that the JPEG image on the left is noticeably sharper that the RAW image on the right (1:1 magnification).
I thought about this for a little while and noticed the brightness was also different between each. It then struck me:- The JPEG is processed by the camera, but the RAW image is unprocessed.
Processing the RAW image in Photoshop provides a result that is equivalent to, if not slightly sharper than the in-camera processed shot.

I was looking for some macro images to see what detail the G10 is capable of capturing and came across this article by Carl Chapman who did a sharpness experiment because he noticed the RAW images on his Canon G10 looked less sharp than those taken with his Canon 750IS.
He realised the following:
The difference was due to looking at both the images on the cameras LCD. The 750IS image was already JPEG and the G10s RAW image was unprocessed. Processing the RAW image in Photoshop provides a result that is equivalent to, if not slightly sharper than the in-camera processed shot.
Now my question is do I have to get software like photoshop (and at what price) before I can view the raw images on my PC or is there complimentary Canon software that will at least allow me to save the images in jpeg? My laptop is a 2003 Compaq with XP Home and I definitely did not budget to upgrade that as well or buy photoshop software.
Here is the whole article for those that are interested
Canon G10 Sharpness Experiment Posted on July 18, 2009
I was looking through a few images the other day and noticed the RAW images from my Canon G10 looked less sharp than those taken with my Canon 750IS. I was a bit concerned as it had recently been repaired so I decided to do an experiment, which taught me a couple of interesting things about the camera. I used a PADI underwater greyscale slate that was lying around as a target. The target was placed in a low light environment to push the camera to the limits, and simulate underwater environment.
A tripod was setup for the cameras, and testing was done with each camera 20cm (macro mode) and 1.5m (non-macro mode) from the target to simulate near and far environments.
Test 1 JPEG to JPEG
The 750 only outputs JPEG images, so for my first test I set both cameras as:-
20cm from the target
widest zoom
macro mode
JPEG output
IS OFF
10 second timer. (The ten second timer was used to help reduce any vibration from pushing the shutter button, as I did not have a remote cable for either camera.)
Image 1
There is little detectable difference in image sharpness between the two cameras at 1:1 magnification. (They have slightly different zoom factors so are not quite aligned in lightroom).
I was happy with this as it indicated nothing had happened to the G10 during the repair.
Test 2 RAW vs JPEG
So if my camera was producing sharp images in JPEG, was there a difference with RAW as I had been seeing. To test this I compared the JPEG and RAW version (produced in the camera) of the same picture from the G10.
The test settings were:-
20cm from the target
widest zoom
macro mode
IS OFF
10 second timer.
Image 2
You can see from the comparison above that the JPEG image on the left is noticeably sharper that the RAW image on the right (1:1 magnification).
I thought about this for a little while and noticed the brightness was also different between each. It then struck me:- The JPEG is processed by the camera, but the RAW image is unprocessed.
Processing the RAW image in Photoshop provides a result that is equivalent to, if not slightly sharper than the in-camera processed shot.