![]() ![]() So far as I'm aware, no other camera setting will have any impact on the 'RAW' data itself. But in reality, the sensor captures whatever light was available, then the shutter closes, then the camera applies "gain" (amplification of the data) based on the ISO setting selected. It's easier to explain to new photographers that changing ISO changes the sensitivity because it behaves "as if" it changed the sensitivity. There is no setting in a camera that changes the "sensitivity" of the imaging sensor. ISO is an amplification of the data which is not applied until *after* the camera shutter closes. ![]() But the RAW file will record whatever actually reached the sensor. If you change the f-stop or shutter speed, then you change what the camera "saw" by changing how much light reaches the sensor. the RAW data records what the digital sensor actually "saw" during the exposure. ISO gain is always applied after the shutter closes but before saving the file.) without applying any tweaks (ohter than the ISO gain. The RAW file contains what the camera *actually* saw. ![]() it applies to things like white balance, hue, etc. Lightroom shows that preview as it processes the RAW data and as soon as it finishes processing the RAW, it switches from showing you the preview to showing you the RAW. Adobe Lightroom) you'll see it's a COLOR image (you might briefly see it as monochrome as the image is opened.) This happens becasue a RAW image saves a thumbnail "preview" image as a JPEG embedded in the RAW and that preview image will be monochrome (or whatever picture style you set). But you can change this in DPP and it'll show you the image as whatever style you set. so it applies the monochrome picture style in DPP. The RAW file actually contains all the color data, but since DPP is a Canon app, it respects the meta-data setting that tells it you used a monochrome picture style. If you open the image in Canon DPP you will also see it's a RAW image (but with some caveats). When you review the shot you just took, you'l see it's a monochrome image. set the picture style to "monochrome" but save the images as RAW (.CR2). In another thread, I mentioned that if you want to see a really obvious exmaple of how this works. ![]()
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