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Microstock Photography Forum - General => Newbie Discussion => Topic started by: Cricket on March 28, 2012, 20:39

Title: Fringe Question
Post by: Cricket on March 28, 2012, 20:39
Hi All,

I am editing a batch of photos I took while on vacation this past year.  Anyway... I know what fringing is for the most part, but what about situations where you have deep blue sky... and even a deeper dark blue on the undersides of tree branches?

Would you consider that fringing or not?

Cricket
Title: Re: Fringe Question
Post by: BaldricksTrousers on March 29, 2012, 01:39
Yes.
Title: Re: Fringe Question
Post by: tab62 on March 29, 2012, 15:34
Yes. Did you push your lens to the max? Use a sweet spot on you lens when shooting objects with a deep blue sky in the background. Also try your lens correction in photoshop to see if you can reduce it.  Also maybe in the hue/sat take down the blues as well. If you did push your lens to the max you probably will not be able to adjust this enough for submission...


T
Title: Re: Fringe Question
Post by: Cricket on March 29, 2012, 17:06
Hi Guys,

Thanks for the answers.  Gosh darn it.... I was hoping it wasn't something I would have to mess around with fixing.  I have Paint Shop Pro X4.  I adjusted the blue channel to correct for just that range of really dark royal blue that was under the tree branches and was able to get rid of most of it without affecting the blue of the sky. 

BTW...I understand that Adobe Lightroom has some sort of adjustment that allows you to bring various colors into alignment with each other... is that the same thing as what you mentioned in Adobe Photoshop?

Cricket
Title: Re: Fringe Question
Post by: tab62 on March 29, 2012, 22:11
sounds very similar- at this point give it a try. What your lens at when you took the photo? I know on my lens 24-70 if I use the extremes I can get aberration especially on bright backgrounds...