robsonj Posted January 10, 2024 Share #1 Posted January 10, 2024 Advertisement (gone after registration) Does anyone else do this, or see any issue in doing it... After import to Lightroom Classic from the Leica DNGs, which are about 80mb each. Does anyone run the Lightroom convert to DNG command, with lossless compression enabled? This often reduces the size of the new DNG to 15-25mb. Am I crazy to do this? I mainly discovered this on my Sony cameras which only offered lossy compressed RAWs, so I would shoot uncompressed RAW, then convert them to a lossless compressed DNG, so no information lost, just a savings of disk space. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Advertisement Posted January 10, 2024 Posted January 10, 2024 Hi robsonj, Take a look here DNG Compression. I'm sure you'll find what you were looking for!
Gobert Posted January 10, 2024 Share #2 Posted January 10, 2024 Since hard disk space is very cheap nowadays, I don’t care. 2 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
robsonj Posted January 10, 2024 Author Share #3 Posted January 10, 2024 (edited) 4 minutes ago, Gobert said: Since hard disk space is very cheap nowadays, I don’t care. true, but it multiples right, my shots go to a smaller faster more expensive NVME drive, then get backed up to 2 locally attached spinning rust drives which then get mirrored to a nas drive which is also mirrors to Backblaze. so I think saving space is still relevant, plus it also allows me to keep more of my most recent work on the fastest NVME drive Edited January 10, 2024 by robsonj Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
M8X2 Posted January 10, 2024 Share #4 Posted January 10, 2024 I do this for every image under two stars per my rating system. 1 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
marchyman Posted January 11, 2024 Share #5 Posted January 11, 2024 23 hours ago, robsonj said: Does anyone else do this, or see any issue in doing it... After import to Lightroom Classic from the Leica DNGs, which are about 80mb each. Does anyone run the Lightroom convert to DNG command, with lossless compression enabled? This often reduces the size of the new DNG to 15-25mb. On my original Q I'd sometimes use save after making my metadata changes (keywords, rating, title, caption, etc) to update the DNG. A side effect of doing that was shrinking the DNG from a typical 40+ MB to around 25 MB. That's because the Q doesn't use any compression and LrC always uses lossless compression. I've never tried that on an M11 file with are compressed out of camera. I am curious. M11 image picked at random: 64.5 MB. After save -- no change. Now let me try the convert to to dng command. On the same image I got a resulting file of 58.2 MB. If that was a typical reduction it's not something I'd bother doing. I'm now curious how you went from 80M to 15-25 MB. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
robsonj Posted January 11, 2024 Author Share #6 Posted January 11, 2024 12 minutes ago, marchyman said: On my original Q I'd sometimes use save after making my metadata changes (keywords, rating, title, caption, etc) to update the DNG. A side effect of doing that was shrinking the DNG from a typical 40+ MB to around 25 MB. That's because the Q doesn't use any compression and LrC always uses lossless compression. I've never tried that on an M11 file with are compressed out of camera. I am curious. M11 image picked at random: 64.5 MB. After save -- no change. Now let me try the convert to to dng command. On the same image I got a resulting file of 58.2 MB. If that was a typical reduction it's not something I'd bother doing. I'm now curious how you went from 80M to 15-25 MB. Are you also embedding the original raw file? I am not Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
SrMi Posted January 11, 2024 Share #7 Posted January 11, 2024 Advertisement (gone after registration) 23 hours ago, robsonj said: Does anyone else do this, or see any issue in doing it... After import to Lightroom Classic from the Leica DNGs, which are about 80mb each. Does anyone run the Lightroom convert to DNG command, with lossless compression enabled? This often reduces the size of the new DNG to 15-25mb. Am I crazy to do this? I mainly discovered this on my Sony cameras which only offered lossy compressed RAWs, so I would shoot uncompressed RAW, then convert them to a lossless compressed DNG, so no information lost, just a savings of disk space. Original DNG: 72MB Lossless compressed DNG: 68MB Lossy compressed DNG is 14MB. You are accidentally running with lossy compression. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
robsonj Posted January 11, 2024 Author Share #8 Posted January 11, 2024 1 minute ago, SrMi said: Original DNG: 72MB Lossless compressed DNG: 68MB Lossy compressed DNG is 14MB. You are accidentally running with lossy compression. O oooo, time to restore a couple of months of photos from the backup. I did have that selected Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
robsonj Posted January 11, 2024 Author Share #9 Posted January 11, 2024 restored, will now recompress with lossy deselected, glad you commented on this! Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Photoworks Posted January 13, 2024 Share #10 Posted January 13, 2024 On 1/10/2024 at 3:30 PM, robsonj said: Am I crazy to do this? yes if you look at reviews you will find that in lossless compression you basically remote the jpg preview that is in there and some other optimization. In some shots, there are real loss of data. I have not tried this myself, but a few people who do astrophotography saw a difference in their photos. But if you don't care about this, go ahead. I just find it to be more work to process true DNG utility, manage the duplicates, backup, and than use Lightroom. But probably I am not the right one to comment. I copy all the images from the card, give the one I like a rating, and edit them not using Lightroom. I find deleting images a waste of time, and in 10 years those imperfect images may be interesting again. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
jaapv Posted January 13, 2024 Share #11 Posted January 13, 2024 If you see a difference, it is not lossless So either Adobe is lying or these Internet pundits are not as expert as one might wish. Take your choice. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
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