StewartR
Suspended / Banned
- Messages
- 11,513
- Name
- Stewart
- Edit My Images
- Yes
One of our customers hired a camera recently to take some photos at an air show. His lens, our camera. He's evaluating the camera as a possible purchase. However he's not sure about it because he's finding that he sometimes gets problems with chromatic aberration that he hasn't seen before and doesn't experience with his camera.
Here's a sample shot. It's a very small portion of the leading edge of an aircraft wing, positioned towards the bottom of the frame in the image, presented here at 200% magnification for clarity. I've created four versions:
But now here's another portion of the same image. This is the opposite wingtip of the plane, positioned towards the top of the frame in the image. Again it's presented here at 200% magnification, and with the same four versions.
You can see in the original and in the saturated version that the CA is broadly similar to the first portion of the image; perhaps a little worse, but not much. But look at the two versions where Lightroom claims to have corrected the CA - it's noticeably worse, not better!
So anyone help work out what's happening? Camera fault? Lens fault? Lightroom fault? Or what?
Here's a sample shot. It's a very small portion of the leading edge of an aircraft wing, positioned towards the bottom of the frame in the image, presented here at 200% magnification for clarity. I've created four versions:
- the original (straight out of camera with lens profile corrections applied in Lightroom);
- with the CA corrected by Lightroom
- with the saturation boosted to 100% in Lightroom, to highlight where the CA is occurring
- with the saturation boosted and CA corrected, to highlight any residual CA
But now here's another portion of the same image. This is the opposite wingtip of the plane, positioned towards the top of the frame in the image. Again it's presented here at 200% magnification, and with the same four versions.
You can see in the original and in the saturated version that the CA is broadly similar to the first portion of the image; perhaps a little worse, but not much. But look at the two versions where Lightroom claims to have corrected the CA - it's noticeably worse, not better!
So anyone help work out what's happening? Camera fault? Lens fault? Lightroom fault? Or what?
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