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P: Fujifilm X-trans cameras and halo around blue areas

Community Beginner ,
Apr 08, 2014 Apr 08, 2014

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Objects photographed against the sky or other blue coloured areas get a "halo" when images from Fujifilm X-trans cameras are developed in Lightroom.

My camera is a Fujifilm X-T1. Before this, I owned the X-E series cameras and noticed the same thing with them. Today I installed the latest version of Lightroom (5.4) and the problem is still there.

Lightroom doesn't handle blue coloured areas well. Take a look at the blue and red traffic signs. You may need to click the images to view them full size (they are 100 % crops).



Compare this with the same raw file developed in Capture One:



Things photographed against a blue sky get a soft "halo":



Looking at the red channel only shows this clearly



For comparison, the same image in Capture One

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correct answers 1 Correct answer

Adobe Employee , Jun 15, 2015 Jun 15, 2015
This was fixed in the CC 2015.1 / 6.1 Update.

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Adobe Employee ,
Apr 10, 2014 Apr 10, 2014

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Thanks for posting Hakan.

The issue you have described is a known limitation of Adobe's current X-Trans demosaic method. Our current method has the benefit that it avoids many types of color speckle artifacts, but the tradeoff is that this type of color bleeding may occur across some colored and light/dark edges. We hope to improve this support in a future release.

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Community Beginner ,
Apr 15, 2014 Apr 15, 2014

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Thank you for your reply!

"We hope to improve this support in a future release."

I'm really looking forward to this - and I know many other Fuji photographers do as well. I posted a thread about this at the fujix-forum.com discussion site and was overwhelmed with the response.

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Guest
May 05, 2014 May 05, 2014

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Hakan, thanks for the examples. That red channel shot really highlights the problem.
--Is using Capture One your solution? I have only fairly recently started using LR & it would bother me to dump it & purchase another program, but I don't want to invest a lot of time working around problems LR has with the X-Trans.... Photo Ninja?

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Community Beginner ,
May 11, 2014 May 11, 2014

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Hello - sorry for replying so late, I've stopped visiting this thread.

I don't have a solution. I don't do a lot of landscape photography, so it's not a huge problem for me, but I would want to se this problem solved. I'm always wondering when this artifact will show up in my images.

I still use Lightroom, because apart from this, it does a lot of things very well: the highlight and shadow recovery are the best I've used, the correction of purple fringing is good, I like the way it renders the noise in high-ISO images - plus it's the fastest of all raw developers I have tried. I've tried Photo Ninja, which is excellent at sharpness, but purple fringing around highlights gets really ugly and I don't like the way the noise looks in high-ISO images. And it's hopelessly slow (on my computer at least). Lightroom seems to be the best all-round compromise.

I've found that setting colour noise reduction to max in Lightroom might make these bright halos around leaves etc. disappear somewhat. It's worth noting that the raw developer that comes with the camera, Silkypix, has the same problem.

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Adobe Employee ,
Jun 15, 2015 Jun 15, 2015

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This was fixed in the CC 2015.1 / 6.1 Update.
Rikk Flohr - Customer Advocacy: Adobe Photography Products

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Community Beginner ,
Jun 15, 2015 Jun 15, 2015

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Thanks for your reply! This is good news if true.

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New Here ,
Jun 16, 2015 Jun 16, 2015

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Now I might pay for the upgrade from LR5!

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New Here ,
Jun 16, 2015 Jun 16, 2015

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Will this improve already processed images I have in LR?

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Community Beginner ,
Jun 16, 2015 Jun 16, 2015

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Yes, there is an obvious improvement. Compare the traffic sign above (LR 5.x) with this image from LR 6.1. Both are 100 % crops; you need to click the images to see them att full size.

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LEGEND ,
Jun 17, 2015 Jun 17, 2015

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Also a huge difference in sharpness. Did you change any other settings between both versions, or is this the default rendering?

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Community Beginner ,
Jun 17, 2015 Jun 17, 2015

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I wasn't able to find the same raw file. For the LR 6.1 conversion I used another raw file from the same day, shot with a smaller aperture, so the background is sharper/more contrasty.

What's important to me is the rendering of the blue/red areas of the traffic sign (you need to click the images to see them at 100 %). LR 6.1 is a clear improvement.

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New Here ,
Jun 17, 2015 Jun 17, 2015

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I have processed the same image in LR5.7 and LR6.1 and there's a significant improvement, here are some 100% crops. In each case the LR5.7 image comes first followed by the LR6.1 image. Processing was fairly normal, modest sharpening with detail at 100%. The first two shots are from near the centre of the image, the second two are from the corner. Shot with 18 - 135 at f8.



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LEGEND ,
Jun 17, 2015 Jun 17, 2015

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Apparently not. At least the problem is still evident in the tram photo used in this DPR article: http://www.dpreview.com/articles/1887...

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New Here ,
Jun 17, 2015 Jun 17, 2015

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I also can confirm that 6.1 produces better results than 6.0. I have some old pictures I processed with Iridient trial and the 6.1 are much closer in quality than the 6.0 ones were. But there is still room for improvement.

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LEGEND ,
Jun 17, 2015 Jun 17, 2015

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Does the improvement also apply to files converted to DNG on import, or only to original RAW processing? (Sorry if this is too simple a question, but I'm not sure what the conversion to DNG entails - is it via the ACR Converter, in which case the damage has already been done?

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New Here ,
Jun 17, 2015 Jun 17, 2015

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That's a good question. I used to use DNG but with Fuji I use RAF because I don't know what the converter does.

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