By the way, good web site for elements users...forum based much information.
Another:
http://www.elementsvillage.com/forums/ discovered elements village some years ago. It's been my "go to" site for adobe PSE
Might pose the question here.
The straight dope: You "open as" your photo in elements and at the drop down box at the bottom of the pic, choose camera raw. The photo will open up in a slightly smaller box.
Right below the histogram is a tool bar. go to the one that says "lens correction" Make sure the tab is on "manual" Tick the box that says "remove chromatic aberration". That just might do it. If not, play with the sliders. If you need even more control, you can use the eyedropper from color sampler tool on the upper left toolbar and click on the problem area.
It works on jpegs just fine also. When finished, simply hit "open image". It is that easy.
tainkc wrote:
The straight dope: You "open as" your photo in elements and at the drop down box at the bottom of the pic, choose camera raw. The photo will open up in a slightly smaller box.
Right below the histogram is a tool bar. go to the one that says "lens correction" Make sure the tab is on "manual" Tick the box that says "remove chromatic aberration". That just might do it. If not, play with the sliders. If you need even more control, you can use the eyedropper from color sampler tool on the upper left toolbar and click on the problem area.
It works on jpegs just fine also. When finished, simply hit "open image". It is that easy.
The straight dope: You "open as" your ph... (
show quote)
I have Elements 11 and I'm having a problem. Your instructions {Right below the histogram is a tool bar. go to the one that says "lens correction" Make sure the tab is on "manual" Tick the box that says "remove chromatic aberration". That just might do it. If not, play with the sliders. If you need even more control, you can use the eyedropper from color sampler tool on the upper left toolbar and click on the problem area.}
are causing me a bit of concern. There is no choice "lens correction", therefore no additional choices can be made. I tried to follow your instruction to the letter, BUT? Please advise as to where I might have gone wrong.
Thank You
JALZZ1 wrote:
I have Elements 11 and I'm having a problem. Your instructions {Right below the histogram is a tool bar. go to the one that says "lens correction" Make sure the tab is on "manual" Tick the box that says "remove chromatic aberration". That just might do it. If not, play with the sliders. If you need even more control, you can use the eyedropper from color sampler tool on the upper left toolbar and click on the problem area.}
are causing me a bit of concern. There is no choice "lens correction", therefore no additional choices can be made. I tried to follow your instruction to the letter, BUT? Please advise as to where I might have gone wrong.
Thank You
I have Elements 11 and I'm having a problem. Your ... (
show quote)
I need to see if I can still get into elements. Something may be different.
tainkc wrote:
I need to see if I can still get into elements. Something may be different.
In his post, I think he missed the part where you tell him to open Camera Raw. He did not post that part of his procedure based on your instruction?????
:shock:
saichiez wrote:
In his post, I think he missed the part where you tell him to open Camera Raw. He did not post that part of his procedure based on your instruction?????
:shock:
He is missing the expanded tool bar. I think he only has Raw 6.7
In response to posts. I have 7.4 raw newest update but I do not have expanded tool bar and yes I did open in Raw as instructed.
JALZZ1 wrote:
In response to posts. I have 7.4 raw newest update but I do not have expanded tool bar and yes I did open in Raw as instructed.
Yeah, I found that out. Now to plan B.
joepeva wrote:
Thank you for your prompt diagnosis of the problem. Now where do I begin to address the problem in PSE 10?
If PSE10 is like other software, you must have a pull down menu editing choice of "noise reduction" and one of the types of noises that can be reduced is chromatic aberration.
joepeva wrote:
Please note the brownish outline on the margin of the flower and the leaves. What is the cause of this and how do I correct the problem? This does not look too unusual on the leaves as they have a brownish cast on the bottom at times. Shot with Nikon D90,Nikor 35/1.8. iso 200, 1/200. white balance auto, sharpening 4
When zoomed in the image, I saw a solid brownish line at the edge of the bright area (The white flower and the green leaf) next to the shadow, I think it was over sharpening.
The color of the CA should be either pinkish purple or blue-green, not brown.
This is only my opinion, hopefully some experts of the UH will give us a real answer!
Thanks but the brownish line is on the unedited raw image Joe Peva
TerryC
Loc: Winter Springs, FL
You might want to bump up your ISO & see if that corrects the problem?
Nice shot Joe. I agree, I recognized it as CA right away. But you know what? I bet only you, me, and other photographers would have noticed. Show it to your friends/family and I bet they say WoW!
Canon uses a fluorite coating on their lens glass to reduce CA, and use Ultra-low Dispersion glass. I see you are a Nikon man, so I can't give any advice on that, other than research the Nikon lenses to see if they do the same. This may reduce further incidences.
That aside, I live in Mississippi, so I naturally have a fondness for the beautiful Magnolia blossom, and you captured it well, and to be such a high contrast photo too! Great job!
Jason-X wrote:
That aside, I live in Mississippi, so I naturally have a fondness for the beautiful Magnolia blossom, and you captured it well, and to be such a high contrast photo too! Great job!
I though I smelled magnolia!
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