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Photography Q&A
White fringe
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<blockquote data-quote="J-see" data-source="post: 411995" data-attributes="member: 31330"><p>I discovered that playing with the highlights in PS and lowering or zeroing the area and tonal range (which is the Camera Raw plugin I assume) does miracles when it comes to this fringe. It doesn't always completely remove it but at worst it is just a thin outline which is more visible in a scaled version of the shot than the shot itself.</p><p></p><p>While battling the fringe, I also experimented with sharpening. In fact, with not sharpening. The last two or three days, >90% of my shots I didn't sharpen more than the 25 LR automatically applies. When I check my RAWs, a good shot has some sharpness even when unedited.</p><p></p><p>Here's two; one sharpening disabled, one with the standard 25 LR applies. It's a reasonable crop.</p><p></p><p>[ATTACH]137859[/ATTACH]</p><p>[ATTACH]137860[/ATTACH]</p><p></p><p>By limiting my sharpening, I also limit the fringe problem in these kind of shots.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="J-see, post: 411995, member: 31330"] I discovered that playing with the highlights in PS and lowering or zeroing the area and tonal range (which is the Camera Raw plugin I assume) does miracles when it comes to this fringe. It doesn't always completely remove it but at worst it is just a thin outline which is more visible in a scaled version of the shot than the shot itself. While battling the fringe, I also experimented with sharpening. In fact, with not sharpening. The last two or three days, >90% of my shots I didn't sharpen more than the 25 LR automatically applies. When I check my RAWs, a good shot has some sharpness even when unedited. Here's two; one sharpening disabled, one with the standard 25 LR applies. It's a reasonable crop. [ATTACH=CONFIG]137859._xfImport[/ATTACH] [ATTACH=CONFIG]137860._xfImport[/ATTACH] By limiting my sharpening, I also limit the fringe problem in these kind of shots. [/QUOTE]
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