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Photography Q&A
White fringe
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<blockquote data-quote="J-see" data-source="post: 419981" data-attributes="member: 31330"><p>The fringe is colorless indeed and is purely related to exposure which makes it annoyingly hard to remove. How this exactly happens I wouldn't know. I know photons that are out of sight for the cam can still hit the sensor and in that, trigger more exposure than we'd expect but if that's the reason for these fringes I would not know.</p><p></p><p>It shows in the RAW from start and this far the only good approach I discovered is to make sure I don't make it worse.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="J-see, post: 419981, member: 31330"] The fringe is colorless indeed and is purely related to exposure which makes it annoyingly hard to remove. How this exactly happens I wouldn't know. I know photons that are out of sight for the cam can still hit the sensor and in that, trigger more exposure than we'd expect but if that's the reason for these fringes I would not know. It shows in the RAW from start and this far the only good approach I discovered is to make sure I don't make it worse. [/QUOTE]
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