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04/09/2007 09:30:42 PM · #1 |
When I took the below shot I used white card as the background. The blue from the mug seems to have been picked up in the white a bit. What causes this and what do I do to stop is happening?

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04/09/2007 09:31:50 PM · #2 |
to me it just looks like that from the DoF |
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04/10/2007 01:07:57 AM · #3 |
Originally posted by noisemaker: to me it just looks like that from the DoF |
Really? How does that work? |
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04/10/2007 01:55:04 AM · #4 |
Originally posted by Nuzzer: Originally posted by noisemaker: to me it just looks like that from the DoF |
Really? How does that work? |
like something out of focus |
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04/10/2007 02:20:11 AM · #5 |
well, I am not an expert, but from what I understand, when light hits something blue, the blue color is givin off as a "color cast". This is the same for any color.
Now, after looking at your editing steps, I see that you bumped the Saturation a full 100. That is pretty large, and this probably brought out the blue color cast more. |
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04/10/2007 07:51:09 AM · #6 |
My guess it that it was due to the fact you were at f1.8 and without a lens hood? Did you see a round haze in the entire photo? Take a photo of the white paper.
Otherwise, it could have been due to reflections from stray light. Try overexposing the white with an auxillary flash
Originally posted by Nuzzer: When I took the below shot I used white card as the background. The blue from the mug seems to have been picked up in the white a bit. What causes this and what do I do to stop is happening?
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