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Tiff is a better file format but its old and not used much now days for 3d work i.e, textures and such I use bmp when doing any edits ( because png textures have their own issues ) but png is the standard for stored image files
Can I delete all of the copies, keeping just the original TIFF scan per photo without impeding universal viewing and access to the TIFF quality? - The photos seem to be uploading from LRcc to iPhotos in the TIFF format. Will they stay TIFF when sent out or posted somewhere or be converted to JPEG? One last thing.
My two cents: Scan the images as high quality master tiffs. Take the scanned image files into Photoshop and create files for use in Premiere as 72 dpi* .png files that are at least twice the pixel dimension of the sequence you want to edit them in.
Other apps are needed for this, Adobe Organizer, for example. If you import media into Adobe Organizer’s “Catalog”, Organizer displays previews of JPEG, RAW, TIFF and PSD files allowing you to choose files by content, and to direct those files into the Adobe editing apps.
Lossy JPEG compression inside a TIFF is often avoided as it may not be obvious and multiple open/saves may degrade the image, whereas saving as a JPEG format file at least makes it obvious that JPEG lossy compression is naturally applied.
I would never even consider saving master files as anything less than 48-bit PSD/TIFF. That's just a given. For exactly twice the file size, you get 16384 individual levels per channel to work with, instead of a mere 256.
JPEG is a lossy format - only useful for things you don't want to edit, or only want low quality versions of. TIFF can be lossless or lossy, depending on the compression options you choose, and is appropriate for image data.
MacBook Air 15" M2, Sonoma OS 14.5. Sometimes I am unable to Save or Save As a HEIC or TIFF file and sometimes I'm unable to Save or Save As those files as a JPEG in Photoshop 2024. I can only save as a JPEG 2000 in the types of files available in the drop down list. I have posted screen captures of the dialog box that appears.
Thanks John, very helpful. Just to clarify a couple of things: 1) What I meant (or the article I read meant) was that a PSD file will show PSD in the filename, and a saved TIFF would show the TIFF extension - therefore from looking at the filename it would be obvious which is the master file and which has been saved for print etc.
The reason you don't want to convert JPEGs to a lossless format like TIFF or PSD is the compression artifacts that you get with a JPEG save are baked in—if you resave as TIFF the artifacts will still be there.