- The problem is not the lens. Chromatic aberration is different. I
have many lenses which I used on analog and I never saw this.
- It must be something after the lens.
- The Sony DSC-R1 is virtually free of blue fringing and uses CMOS.
Suspects are CCD chips or the anti alias filter. From what I
understand the anti alias filter scatters the image from the lens with
microscopic lenses. Maybe these micro lenses have chromatic aberration
or something else.
I don't know, maybe Sony finally solved it. What I do know is that the
DSC-R1 doesn't show this and all CCD camera's suffer from blue
fringing and all companies never mention it.
Anyway, I don't like blue fringes on my Pentax horizons and trees.


On 2/5/06, Kostas Kavoussanakis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Sun, 5 Feb 2006, Toine Kuiper wrote:
>
> > The blue fringing is everywhere in the image (left right and center).
> > Only on high contrast transitions. I also suspect the antlialias
> > filter like DagT mentioned.
>
> So why did you conclude that it's the CCD technology to blame and CMOS
> would be the solution? Don't they have antialias filters?
>
> Kostas
>
>

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