Thank you, this tutorial was all about editing a JPG photo. Here's the link that shows you how to export your photo from NX Studio. ruclips.net/video/7nymTGTVPdg/видео.htmlfeature=shared&t=1574
Glad it was helpful! and thanks from commenting. Yes, I do try to emphasis this about White Balance as some people don't realise this imitation about jpg's.
@@CharlesNPhotography Try Auto White Balance, That's what it's there for. You don't like jpeg, if there good enough for Ken Rockwell there good enough for me
@@staffordspotter1402 Thank you, but if you're shooting in JPG, then you want to make sure that the White balance is correct and Auto White Balance does not always give you the correct colour. Ken is very good at doing reviews and he chooses to only shoot in JPG, that doesn't mean that JPG's are best.
Great and useful video. I have always shot JPEG and now I am torn. I have a D610 and just bought a Z5 and D850. Not being used to RAW I was very disappointed that the D850 was not as good as the D610 images were when shooting raw, there was so much noise?
Michael, check out this tutorial that I did on setting up your camera for JPG. ruclips.net/video/LMv8IeoF8m0/видео.html Remember that the D850 has twice the pixel count as the D610. I've used the D850 and found it so good.
My laptop died a couple months ago along with my installed previous version of Nikon's free ViewNX2 - trying to relearn StudioNX. ViewNX2 allowed for color tweaking in jpgfine but StudioNX does not?
Yes, that's correct. If you listen to my reason why this isn't allowed it makes sense. But I can understand that some people would like to try at adjust the colour of their images
I did get distracted (stopped the video :) looking to see if ViewNX2 was actually still available somewhere. I'm more used to my Nikon 5500 but it was all so overwhelming in the beginning. Old computer (or user!) had trouble with the huge file RAW + jpgfine seemed to create. Now elder care stress last 6 months makes learning something new feel daunting again. Just picking up my camera again is mental therapy enough!
Once you edits a JPEG, how do you save the changes permanently? For example, if I crop an image, I want to be able to open that file through the windows explorer by double-clicking it and then seeing it cropped in the default windows image viewer. How do you commit changes?
@@CharlesNPhotography Thanks much! Is that really the only way? I used to have an older version of this software where the JPEG file was updated with every change you made, while saving a copy of the original automatically. It was very convenient. I find this additional export step very annoying when just casually cropping and adding touch ups to some pictures.
@@danielgasparrodriguez932 Daniel, this is a brand new program. Nikon have done away with the older editing programs. I find this method much better as I still have to original file, so if I realise that I've done a mistake, I can go back and re-edit the original file.
@@xcx8646 You're edits are saved automatically when you edit an image. Export means that you "Export" the image and are not over-writing your original image. For example if you open your image in Photoshop and modify it, then click Save! you will over-write your original image, but if you click Save As, then your original image is still there and you now have two version of your image.
Thanks for another great video. I have watched a few vids on your channel and all are very informative. At present i only shoot in jpeg and have been using NX Studio for about 6 months I live in Brisbane so know some of the places you have visited for your videos Only took up photography late in life about 4 years ago, so a weekend photographer as such. I mostly shoot wildlife, mainly birds . I still use my original camera a Nikon D3300 with a Nikkor AF-S 18-300mm 3.5-6.3G ED DX VR lens Your tutorial was great but you did not mention "Sharpness Adjustment". For me this is the best tool to get the best out of a jpeg image especially wildlife. i am sure you are aware of this but it is impossible for you to cover everything this software can do in a 9 minute video. So, thought i would mention it For those that want to use it. Open Sharpness Adjustment, click Sharpness and a slider appears that goes from 0 to 10. I found 3 or 4 is sufficient for most images. However I have not delved into the "Unsharp Mask" part that when ticked, opens up other things to do with sharpness As you mentioned their are limited things you can do in post production if shooting in jpeg. It is so important for people to have good camera settings if shooting in jpeg. Finding those settings for each type of photography is, well, another story/vid altogether
The only raw editor that immediately gives pure color, without spurious shades.
Yes, but Adobe Camera Raw does a very good job as well 🤔
Thanks, but you didn't talk about how to save the photo after you had cropped it.
Thank you, this tutorial was all about editing a JPG photo. Here's the link that shows you how to export your photo from NX Studio.
ruclips.net/video/7nymTGTVPdg/видео.htmlfeature=shared&t=1574
Thank you, this was exactly the information I needed 👍🏼
Glad it was helpful! and thanks for letting me know, very much appreciated 🙏
Excellent video. Good to see what the limits of JPEG are. Also noticed your concern about white balance. Again, excellent.
Glad it was helpful! and thanks from commenting. Yes, I do try to emphasis this about White Balance as some people don't realise this imitation about jpg's.
@@CharlesNPhotography You've changed my mind about using Auto white balance. good advice.
@@CharlesNPhotography That's not the limit of jpeg it's the limit of Nikon Software
@@CharlesNPhotography Try Auto White Balance, That's what it's there for. You don't like jpeg, if there good enough for Ken Rockwell there good enough for me
@@staffordspotter1402 Thank you, but if you're shooting in JPG, then you want to make sure that the White balance is correct and Auto White Balance does not always give you the correct colour. Ken is very good at doing reviews and he chooses to only shoot in JPG, that doesn't mean that JPG's are best.
I've never seen Nudgee look so nice 😊
Thank you, sometimes we get lucky 😊
Great and useful video. I have always shot JPEG and now I am torn. I have a D610 and just bought a Z5 and D850. Not being used to RAW I was very disappointed that the D850 was not as good as the D610 images were when shooting raw, there was so much noise?
Michael, check out this tutorial that I did on setting up your camera for JPG. ruclips.net/video/LMv8IeoF8m0/видео.html
Remember that the D850 has twice the pixel count as the D610. I've used the D850 and found it so good.
My laptop died a couple months ago along with my installed previous version of Nikon's free ViewNX2 - trying to relearn StudioNX. ViewNX2 allowed for color tweaking in jpgfine but StudioNX does not?
Yes, that's correct. If you listen to my reason why this isn't allowed it makes sense. But I can understand that some people would like to try at adjust the colour of their images
I did get distracted (stopped the video :) looking to see if ViewNX2 was actually still available somewhere. I'm more used to my Nikon 5500 but it was all so overwhelming in the beginning. Old computer (or user!) had trouble with the huge file RAW + jpgfine seemed to create. Now elder care stress last 6 months makes learning something new feel daunting again. Just picking up my camera again is mental therapy enough!
Once you edits a JPEG, how do you save the changes permanently? For example, if I crop an image, I want to be able to open that file through the windows explorer by double-clicking it and then seeing it cropped in the default windows image viewer. How do you commit changes?
On the top right corner of NX Studio there's the "Export" button, click on it and follow the prompts.
@@CharlesNPhotography Thanks much! Is that really the only way? I used to have an older version of this software where the JPEG file was updated with every change you made, while saving a copy of the original automatically. It was very convenient. I find this additional export step very annoying when just casually cropping and adding touch ups to some pictures.
@@danielgasparrodriguez932 Daniel, this is a brand new program. Nikon have done away with the older editing programs. I find this method much better as I still have to original file, so if I realise that I've done a mistake, I can go back and re-edit the original file.
Yes, that is the only way.
@@xcx8646 You're edits are saved automatically when you edit an image. Export means that you "Export" the image and are not over-writing your original image. For example if you open your image in Photoshop and modify it, then click Save! you will over-write your original image, but if you click Save As, then your original image is still there and you now have two version of your image.
Thanks for another great video.
I have watched a few vids on your channel and all are very informative. At present i only shoot in jpeg and have been using NX Studio for about 6 months
I live in Brisbane so know some of the places you have visited for your videos
Only took up photography late in life about 4 years ago, so a weekend photographer as such. I mostly shoot wildlife, mainly birds .
I still use my original camera a Nikon D3300 with a Nikkor AF-S 18-300mm 3.5-6.3G ED DX VR lens
Your tutorial was great but you did not mention "Sharpness Adjustment". For me this is the best tool to get the best out of a jpeg image especially wildlife.
i am sure you are aware of this but it is impossible for you to cover everything this software can do in a 9 minute video. So, thought i would mention it
For those that want to use it. Open Sharpness Adjustment, click Sharpness and a slider appears that goes from 0 to 10. I found 3 or 4 is sufficient for most images.
However I have not delved into the "Unsharp Mask" part that when ticked, opens up other things to do with sharpness
As you mentioned their are limited things you can do in post production if shooting in jpeg. It is so important for people to have good camera settings if shooting in jpeg.
Finding those settings for each type of photography is, well, another story/vid altogether
Thank you so much for your feedback, very much appreciated
The limitations on jpeg processing is not just limited to NX Studio.
You're right. But You are able to do more with a JPG image in Adobe Lightroom, then in Nikon Studio NX
Silkypix jpeg is brilliant for processing jpeg images you can adjust white balance with it and it's not expensive, try it out with a months trial.
What do you find is the best free JPEG editor out there?
I haven't tried that many free editing software programs, I just use NX Studio as it's Nikon
@@CharlesNPhotography In the past and I still do my JPEG editing with FastStone