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24th March 2011, 06:03 PM
#1
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24th March 2011, 06:27 PM
#2
Re: Canon S90 purple fringing
Use the HSL adjustment options and lower down the values of the Aqua, Blue, Purple, and Magenta colors on the Saturation. On the luminance, lower only the values of the blue, purple, and magenta. Adjust the recovery value to +79, and clarity to +63. That should help lessen the effect of the color fringing.
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24th March 2011, 06:36 PM
#3
Re: Canon S90 purple fringing
cheers for that. But what if I want some purple in the shot?
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24th March 2011, 07:02 PM
#4
Re: Canon S90 purple fringing
You would probably have to select that area and invert the selection so that area would be excluded. Or work with layers and masks so that the correction could be limited to a layer with a suitable mask.
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24th March 2011, 10:14 PM
#5
Re: Canon S90 purple fringing
How big did you have to print it before you saw the fringing?
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25th March 2011, 12:29 PM
#6
Re: Canon S90 purple fringing
The purple fringing is an artifact of the lens. Some lenses show it more than others and it typically appears most with high contrast backlit situations (i.e. branches against the sky, etc.). I have been using DxO Optics Pro as a RAW converter and it does an excellent job with chromatic aberration (and purple fringing). DxO uses corrections specific to your camera, lens, and settings to remove optical problems. After trying several other products, I like it the best. My older Sony F828 has a purple fringing problem similar to your Canon S90 and DxO did a really good job of clearing it up. Its other corrections are also very good. It is supposed to work as a front-end to Lightroom and it is available on a trial basis. You might wan to check it out.
The link below has a description of the problem and how it is corrected.
http://www.dxo.com/en/photo/dxo_opti...ons/aberration
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25th March 2011, 07:44 PM
#7
Moderator
Re: Canon S90 purple fringing
Hi Rob,
I'd certainly suggest following JohnC's idea for an automatic fix.
My method for dealing with CA is to wipe a strong desaturaion brush over the offending branches, this brush is usually the third option (looking like a sponge) under the dodge and burn icon in something like PS Elements or PS CS3/4/5 (if you have it). It allows you to only put it where needed and since you generally don't need to be too accurate, with good use of image zoom and brush size, it can be quite quick to do.
I don't get much with my current DSLR lenses, but it is often a problem with P&S and bridge camera lenses, my Fuji S6500 was susceptible to it given 'the wrong conditions' such as you have here. Over exposure does make it worse, so do "stop it down" when you know you should
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25th March 2011, 09:59 PM
#8
Re: Canon S90 purple fringing
Thanks for the good advice, will try those techniques.
I mainly use LR and just getting to grips with CS5, knew there must be a good method hidden there somewhere!!
I dont get see this with my DSLR either but sometimes weight is an issue when I'm climbing!!
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