Iceburner 0 #1 August 9, 2007 anyone know of ways to reduce this...other than a different lense? Is there a way to edit it out of a video that's easy to do, or is it pretty much a "you are shit outta luck" problem? I've read up on what it is, and understand where it comes from, but haven't heard of any ways to reduce it, without changing your lense. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
stratostar 5 #2 August 9, 2007 On your video or stills? If you mean video, zoom in a tad. If you mean stills take off your lens hood.... you can't pay for kids schoolin' with love of skydiving! ~ Airtwardo Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
DSE 5 #3 August 9, 2007 Is it a reflective vignette/halo? Or a lens barrel vignette? If it's the latter, Stratostar gave you the recipe. If it's the former, is the inside ring of your wide silver-colored? If so, color it black with either folded over tape, or a black magic marker. That'll zap it most of the time. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
dragon2 2 #4 August 9, 2007 Also for skydiving, turn off image stabilisor if you have it on. IS also causes vignetting on some cameras. ciel bleu, Saskia Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
dragon2 2 #5 August 9, 2007 Editing it out of video on a pc isn't that hard, you just have to re-size the video until it no longer shows. Image quality will degrade obviously and it'll take some time rendering but I do it from time to time when I get footage like that for an end-of-day video etc. ciel bleu, Saskia Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Iceburner 0 #6 August 9, 2007 it's on video...i've played with the zoom a bit, and noticed a reduction...just haven't had time to play with it much sense then. Thanks for the replies! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites