![]() You will see just the jpeg in the iPhone photos app unless your using a app that supports raw like Lightroom or VSCO. So what I do is unload my sd card to my iPhone it transfers raw plus jpeg. One is fast and works with the iPad Pro the other is slower. Go to the Apple website and search camera kit there’s two different ones. Then I can edit and sort on my iPhone or my Mac plus this eliminates the need for a backup when out since they are stored on the iPhone the Mac and iCloud! This lets me edit raw or jpeg anywhere.Ĭan you explain in more detail what is a camera kit from apple? And what exactly are you doing I want to look into that presently I just put them in my photos app on my computer but not sure what you are saying here. I upload all my photos to my iPhone! Using the camera kit from Apple I’ll unload all pictures to the iPhone then they are all synced automatically to my Mac. I have a day job and interests outside of photography, so I need to maximise my time. I’ve done my editing, for today, and I didt even have to wake the MacBook. Then edit later (or now), on a phone, tablet or laptop (syncing down to Classic if you need the features. Upload to full size images to phone, then onto Lightroom CC, in the cloud, over 4G or WiFi. The world turned while you were writing that. Why do you need such big file to your phone? If you upload your photo to Facebook or Google, they will downsize it anyway. Many photographers do the opposite: shoot raw plus a small size JPG for quicker preview. fewer JPG artifacts, but very little effect on actual resolution). (Side note: "extra fine" does not really improve resolution, it reduces the amount of compression, i.e. If you shoot raw, what is the point of having a highest resolution JPG. Smaller file size because of compression, what else is the point of JPG? But they are still full size in terms of number of pixels (provided you specified full size in the menu). Sony Play Memories does not support transfer of RAW files over WIFI. The only way I'm aware of getting a RAW photos from camera (again using a A7R2) to iPhone is to use the USB camera connection cable and import directly to iOS Photos. Would be appreciative of the confirmation of the above. Given the A7R3 has dual card slots it may handle this differently and shooting in RAW+JPEG may produce a full 42MP JPEG file. In fact to get the highest possible resolution of JPEG, it would be better to shoot in Extra Fine, and forego shooting in RAW all together. On my A7R2, when shooting Raw+JPEG, the JPEG's would be a considerably smaller size than 42MP. I don't have a A7R3 so I'm not very knowledgeable about how the recording onto two cards works, however I'm be interested to know, if when shooting Raw+JPEG, are the JPEG images full res? Now I can transfer 42MP files to my iPhone. So I have RAW recording to the UHS2 SD card in slot 1, JPG recording to the UHS1 SD card in slot 2, and playback set to slot 2. To transfer 42 MP photos (jpg only), you must set the playback memory card to be the one to which you are writing the JPG files. Perhaps the problem is I’m having the RAW go to card 1 and the JPG go to card 2? You don't have to ever touch it.Are you by any chance shooting RAW and trying to transfer that to the phone? You need to shoot RAW+JPG or JPG, in your camera for it to transfer, or it will transfer only the embedded thumbnail jpg from the RAW file. It bulk uploads all photos and keeps looking for new ones and uploads those too. Simply download PicBackMan (it's free!), register your account, connect to your online store and tell PicBackMan where your photos are - PicBackMan does the rest, automatically. PicBackMan is the easiest and simplest way to keep your photos safely backed up in one or more online accounts. Here's an effortless way to backup photos - PicBackMan. Making backups of your photos & videos is a chore you probably skip, but it really doesn't have to be hard. Your full resolution photo is saved to your album. Press down on the photo and hold your finger on the image until buttons appear. Navigate to the photo folder and tap on the photo which you want to download. Once you have signed in your account, you will see all your photo and video folders. Enter email address and password to log in to your Dropbox account. You can use Safari or Opera to open website. To download full resolution photos to iPhone, open '' from your iPhone or iPad's browser. There is a way to download full resolution photos to iPhone or iPad with Dropbox. If you are using Dropbox app to download photos to iPhone or iPad, you will notice that Dropbox downsizes large photos. Downloading full resolution photos to iPhone or iPad with Dropbox is easy. ![]()
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