Removing chromatic aberrations

Chromatic aberration occurs when the camera records incorrect colors within the image. In conventional film cameras, chromatic aberration is usually caused by a lens defect. In digital cameras, several factors can contribute to chromatic aberration, including the following:

In your own digital photos, you may notice chromatic aberrations in photos with the following content:

After identifying these types of color defects, you can reduce or eliminate them.

To remove chromatic aberrations from a photo Back to Top

Edit workspace 

 

Mark the Show Differences check box. The affected areas appear in the After pane as white areas on black. Brighter areas represent greater degrees of correction.
Mark the Show Differences check box, and make sure the Preview on Image check box is marked.

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To create more than 10 sample boxes, you can apply the corrections and then restart the effect.

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You can automatically create a new layer on which the corrected image resides by marking the Result on New Layer check box. This option protects your original image on its own layer. If you do not mark this check box, the corrections are applied on the same layer as the original image.

You can limit the number of "false corrections" by making a selection and then marking the Result on New Layer check box. You can also use this command on separate layers of an image.


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