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 Post FIX for DUST speck ?!? 
		
		
		I just finished transferring some footage from my camera to a safety/edit copy on my DV deck.  The deck displays on a regular monitor and to my horror, there is a dust speck on all of my .6 Wide Angle footage.  I checked the adapter... clean.  I checked the lens.. voila a large particle. 
	I didn't see the speck in the viewfinder and I was doing mostly on the go shooting, so I didn't use a large field monitor. The fact that the on-camera lens goes to MACRO when the .6 adapter is employed made it focus on the dust speck more closely. It isn't noticable on my static shots or shots with a lot of detail, but on moving shots with sky or white walls it's unuseable. My question... Is there a post method that (like in Photoshop) can replace pixels in a spot with pixels that surround it? The solution is to make sure you don't have any dust on the lens or bring a field monitor.. I know. I plan to reshoot the unuseable scenes after an almost final cut so I don't have to reshoot everything, but it would be nice if there was a program function that could do it relatively inexpensively. Thanks  | 
		
 I know Adobe Photoshop can import a filmstrip sequence from Premiere. I can't remember if you have to edit frame by frame, or if it is possible to edit several frames at the same time. I haven't used this funktion myself, so I can't give you any details. 
	>Is there a post method that (like in Photoshop) can >replace pixels in a spot with pixels that surround it? Yes, Photoshop can do this.  | 
		
 I think you already knew that Photoshop can clone, so... 
	...After Effects can, too. Depending on your budget you can either buy After Effects 6.0 Pro or download the 30-day fully functioning trial from Adobe. I don't have much experience with AE 6.0 and/or its cloning tools (I'm a 5.5 Standard user), but a Google search turns up some info: Search: clone tool after effects You can work with the filmstrip file in P-shop as suggested, but it can be time-consuming (I say from experience). Download the AE 6.0 trial and try the clone tool -- it might work great.  | 
		
 THanks,  
	I have used the cloning tools for retouching archival stills with Painter, but I am not looking forward to a frame by frame approach. I think I might try the after effects if I can't do it the way someone on DVXUSER.com suggested. Their solution was to create a mask where the spot is and then add a layer of identical video but offset it slightly. I can do that in BLADE. Again thanks to everyone who responded.  | 
		
 That's a cute method. You should probably make a small mask in the titler and use that to only offset the small area that you want to cover up othwise the video will be blurry. 
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