TIFF is the industry standard file type for archival imaging. It preserves files with total image accuracy and handles very high bit depths. The downside is file size — a one TIFF photo from a DSLR may reach 50 to 100 megabytes.
To share or use TIFF files, changing them to JPG significantly lowers file size keeping good photo quality for general applications.
Such large files are not suitable for web use. Email services have attachment size limits. Websites enforce upload size restrictions. Online stores perform poorly when images are oversized.
This conversion shrinks storage by up to 95 percent depending on the photo type and quality settings. Which makes files easy to send and suitable for web.
Professional photographers commonly maintain a lossless archive for print production, while saving JPG versions for web publication.
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