When Good Lenses Go Bad - Chromatic Aberration - How to Test & Fix

4 years ago
4

The 135 f2 is a wonderful, sharp, high performing lens, but when a student emailed me asking about all this crazy purple and green fringing going on and asking if it was normal, I assumed he had shot it wide open. He hadn't, it was stooped down to f3.5 and reported that as he continued to stop down still saw . All lenses have a degree of CA or Chromatic Abberation, its something typically we see in areas of high contrast. Many cameras have software to clean this up automatically, so we may not see it, and there are also ways to clean it up in post.

Michael's Canon 90D Facebook User Group
https://www.facebook.com/groups/Canon90D/

Michael's Canon 90D Crash Course Training Tutorial
https://tinyurl.com/r5ozzxz

Michael’s Intro Camera Tutorial Videos:
https://www.canontrainingvideo.com

My new MAVEN Mini Microphone kit for beginning videographers:
https://www.amazon.com/Maven-Mini-Microphone-Kit-DSLRs/dp/B07ZHWJ6XY

Michael’s "Everything Else Crash Course"
This course is jam packed with lessons to help you take your photography to the next level. The topics covered in this corse deal with the Photography Core, Composition, Lighting,Portraits, Digital Basics, Video Shooting,Audio Recording & Clean Up, Intro To Strobes, Planning & Trouble Shooting, & Real World Shooting.
https://www.maventutorials.com/collections/all/products/everything-else-crash-course

Michael’s Maven Straps:
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07MVXKCHW?ref=myi_title_dp&th=1

#Canon90D #CanonCameraLenses #ChromaticAberration

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