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Thread: Help. What would be causing this?

  1. #1
    Ausphotography Regular
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    Help. What would be causing this?

    I have got a lot of colour fringing with my Nikon 70-300 mm lens today, EXIF is 1/320s @ f/5.6, focal length 300 mm, ISO 500 (to get a faster shuuter speed?) I haven't had this problem before, is it to do with the ISO?
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    Margaret

    Fuji XT2 Manfrotto MF 055XPROB Pro Tripod & gynbal head, Fuji 18-55 mm, Fuji 14 mm, Fuji 55-200 mm, Fuji 80 mm macro, Fuji 60mm macro, Fuji 100-400 mm, SB600 Speedlight, Photoshop, Lightroom on a Mac, Critiques welcomed


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    I would say a combination of ISO and speed.
    Site: DzR Photography
    Flickr: Flickr

    Camera: Sony A350 DSLR
    Lenses: 18-70mm, 55-200mm, 50mm f1.4, 70-300G, Minolta 35-70mm f4, Tamron 17-50 2.8
    Flash: Sony HVLF42AM
    Tripod: 190xPROB, 488RC4
    Memory: Sandisk Extreme 200x CF
    Software: Adobe Photoshop CS3 + RAW

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    Amor fati!
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    is it the af-d or af-s version of the lens? CA can be reduced with good coatings on lens glass. if lens coatings arent up to scratch then you get CA.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chromatic_aberration

    some astronomers use a minus violet filter to remove this, but i dont know what to do with a photographic lens.

  4. #4
    Ausphotography Regular
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    David it is the AF 70-300 1:4-5.6 G, plastic model, I suspect I made a boo boo on buying this lens, didn't know much about them until I started to look at images on AP and the lenses they are taken with, I find it pretty soft too, than G for Photoshop! Margaret

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    What you can do is, in PS open HSL and drop the magenta, and similar colours, back to desaturate. If it wipes out other parts of you photo that you don't want messed with just apply a mask, invert and brush the areas you want fixed.

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