![]() ![]() ![]() Then you’ll really see what the 1000D / XS is capable of. So unless you prefer the subdued look of the default JPEGs, you may wish to increase the in-camera sharpening by a notch or better still, shoot in RAW instead. The high contrast buildings can cause sharpening artefacts on most cameras, but even then there’s few who wouldn’t prefer the RAW conversion below right – and this is using the default settings with the supplied software, so required minimal effort. We’ve seen a similar effect with other recent Canon DSLRs, where default JPEGs can appear relatively soft and RAW conversions look like a veil has been lifted. Below are crops taken from the original JPEG file alongside the RAW version, processed in Canon’s supplied Digital Photo Professional 3.4 software using the default settings (Sharpness of 3). ![]() We photographed the scene here in the EOS 1000D / XS’s RAW plus Large Fine JPEG mode, allowing us to directly compare images created from exactly the same data. Canon EOS 1000D / Rebel XS: JPEG versus RAW ![]()
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