DV Info Net

DV Info Net (https://www.dvinfo.net/forum/)
-   What Happens in Vegas... (https://www.dvinfo.net/forum/what-happens-vegas/)
-   -   Color corrector (secondary) and CA (https://www.dvinfo.net/forum/what-happens-vegas/127505-color-corrector-secondary-ca.html)

Sassi Haham August 6th, 2008 09:11 AM

Color corrector (secondary) and CA
 
2 Attachment(s)
Hi all,
How do you correct for chromatic aberration within Vegas ?
I would like to know how experienced vegas users handle CA, a more aesthetic technique then mine ...
On the Rosi Starling Video grab I used the Color corrector (secondary).
I don't really know how to use this plug-in but I found that choosing the fringing color (cyan/blue) with the "select effect range" eyedropper tool and then sliding down saturation
I got rid of the CA (most of it).

Sassi

Andrew Kufahl August 6th, 2008 04:25 PM

Personally I believe you are using the correct tool. As far as what technique/settings to use depends on what you are dealing with. Reducing saturation on the affected area will get you more toward grayscale though, which leads me to this...

I looked at your sample photo, and the only place I could see obvious CA was on one of the leaves along the left edge. To me, it looks blue-ish green. I would think you'd want it to be green (to match the leaf), so I selected the effect range (like you) but then used "Rotate hue" until it changed to a green color that was closer to the leaf.

There are probably a ton of different ways to go depending on the extent of CA.

Andrew

Sassi Haham August 17th, 2008 07:27 AM

Not enough control
 
Andrew,
Thanks for your advice.
I wish though that there would be more control when picking the colour of the fringing area
Or some practical way to play with it or fine tune until getting rid of it.
Sassi

Bill Ravens August 17th, 2008 07:52 AM

Actually, I don't think this is right. CA is the result of an optical imperfection that focuses the different wavelengths of light at different locations on the film plane. (because different wavelengths refract differently when passing thru glass)I.E. red/magenta is shifted relative to green/cyan. In order to correct the problem, at least theoretically, one needs to shift each color value by the correct number of pixels to get everything to "line up". To manually desaturate the color fringe, which is what you do with the vegas secondary CC tool, is only concealing the problem, not fixing the problem.

I would refer you to the CA correction plugin for virtualdub or Lightroom.


All times are GMT -6. The time now is 04:14 PM.

DV Info Net -- Real Names, Real People, Real Info!
1998-2024 The Digital Video Information Network