Excellent shot. Yes, that's obviously the boundary fringing that doesn't 
respond to CA correction. Godfrey's method of color blending sounds 
interesting. Or you could probably paint over that edge on a 400% blowup. I'd 
also burn in the highlight a bit.
Paul


> Hi Paul,
> 
> I tried that with no luck.  Here's the pic in question.  Note the temple
> piece of the woman's eye glasses:
> 
> http://home.earthlink.net/~scbelinkoff/wob_test.html
> 
> Shel 
> 
> > [Original Message]
> > From: Paul Stenquist 
> 
> > Sometimes it's a result of red and blue chromatic aberration. If so, 
> > you can correct it reasonably well by going to the "lens" tab in the 
> > RAW converter and adjusting the CA sliders. At other times it seems to 
> > be the result of backlight on dark objects, such as branches against a 
> > sky and doesn't seem to be affected much by CA adustment. I find this 
> > effect is more common to some lenses than others. In situations where 
> > it was important to remove the fringe and CA adjustment yields little 
> > improvement, I've occasionally resorted to cloning it out after masking 
> > or selecting the appropriate area. Lots of work, but it can be done 
> > effectively.
> 
> > On Sep 21, 2005, at 6:48 AM, Shel Belinkoff wrote:
> >
> > > Any suggestions on how to rid an image of purple fringing ...
> 
> 

Reply via email to