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Lightroom Classic (or Photoshop) Removing Halos

Participant ,
May 28, 2023 May 28, 2023

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I've spent over an hour looking for videos online and trying things out, but I have yet to find a simple way to REMOVE HALOS on so many of my images!  I usually wind up spending an hour cloning them out.  I just don't know what to do.  

 

I don't know if it's easier to do it in LrC or PS, but I just need help, as this is so very frustrating and I'm getting tired of doing this tedious cloning!

 

Thank you!

 

Diane

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Community Expert ,
May 28, 2023 May 28, 2023

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in the future, to find the best place to post your message, use the list here, https://community.adobe.com/

 

p.s. i don't think the adobe website, and forums in particular, are easy to navigate, so don't spend a lot of time searching that forum list. do your best and we'll move the post if it helps you get responses.

 

<moved from using the community>

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Community Expert ,
May 29, 2023 May 29, 2023

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It could be advantageous to know 'Why' or 'How' the halos are being created in the first place.

eg. Are you Over-sharpening?

And there is a Photoshop Brush technique in this link-

https://www.capturelandscapes.com/how-to-quickly-fix-edge-halos-in-photoshop/

 

Regards. My System: Windows-11, Lightroom-Classic 14.2 Photoshop 26.3, ACR 17.2, Lightroom 8.2, Lr-iOS 9.0.1, Bridge 15.0.2, .

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LEGEND ,
May 30, 2023 May 30, 2023

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What do you mean by halos?

 

Let's see an example.

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Community Expert ,
May 30, 2023 May 30, 2023

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@Keith Reeder  I assumed the OP is refering to this type of artefact- Can be caused by Over-Sharpening, or selective Brush Adjustments, or Masking that doesn't work so well.

2023-05-31 07_35_23-Xn _o1A123__DSC5976A.jpg_.jpg

 

Regards. My System: Windows-11, Lightroom-Classic 14.2 Photoshop 26.3, ACR 17.2, Lightroom 8.2, Lr-iOS 9.0.1, Bridge 15.0.2, .

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Participant ,
May 30, 2023 May 30, 2023

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Thank you.

I have no idea how it happened because they are images for many years ago
that I recently opened to edit.

Diane G.

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LEGEND ,
May 31, 2023 May 31, 2023

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That's that I expect too, Rob - but I know how bent out of shape some people get when they think you've assumed...

 

You hint at the point I would have made, though: if we're talking about over-sharpening halos, you don't want to remove them, you want to make sure they don't happen in the first place, so I'd still like to see what Diane is seeing. 

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Participant ,
May 31, 2023 May 31, 2023

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Hello all.

Here's an example. It's from a picture maybe 6-7 years ago but I've been
finding a lot like this and I wind up cloning each line out inch by inch,
and I gave up with that.

I have NO idea where those lines come, I know nothing about them or how
they're even created. Perhaps there was some editing on these 6-7 years
ago, but I don't know. There's a few I want to keep and fix, but this is
too much work to clone this all out by hand.

See attached. Thank you.

Diane G.

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Community Expert ,
May 31, 2023 May 31, 2023

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@Diane in Ohio There's no attachment.

 

My System: Intel i7-8700K - 64GB RAM - NVidia Geforce RTX 3060 - Windows 11 Pro 24H2 -- LR-Classic 14 - Photoshop 26 - Nik Collection 7 - PureRAW 4 - Topaz PhotoAI 3

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Participant ,
May 31, 2023 May 31, 2023

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Not sure what to say. The attachment was there because I "bcc'd" myself to
make sure.

Here it is again.

Thanks.

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Adobe Employee ,
May 31, 2023 May 31, 2023

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There is no attachment in your post.  

Rikk Flohr: Adobe Photography Org

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Community Expert ,
May 31, 2023 May 31, 2023

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There's already nothing to see. Please don't attach something, to insert screenshots, please use the "Insert Photos" icon in the toolbar.

AxelMatt_0-1685554292289.png

 

My System: Intel i7-8700K - 64GB RAM - NVidia Geforce RTX 3060 - Windows 11 Pro 24H2 -- LR-Classic 14 - Photoshop 26 - Nik Collection 7 - PureRAW 4 - Topaz PhotoAI 3

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Participant ,
May 31, 2023 May 31, 2023

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Sorry. No idea what that means. Not familiar with using this process.
When I hit reply I'm in a "regular" email on my computer screen.

Thank you.

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Participant ,
May 31, 2023 May 31, 2023

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Let's try this.Screenshot sample for Adobe.jpg

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Community Expert ,
May 31, 2023 May 31, 2023

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Hi Diane, this looks like an oversharpened JPEG, which is where the halo is coming from, as predicted by @Rob_Cullen. Have you tried using a brush with negative sharpening applied? From 0 to -50 sharpness is removed, from -50 to -100 it acts as a lens blur, so keep it above those. 

Sean McCormack. Author of 'Essential Development 3'. Magazine Writer. Former Official Fuji X-Photographer.

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Participant ,
May 31, 2023 May 31, 2023

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Hello, and thanks for your response!  Those are older images and the image, for the sake of sending it here, was super blown up.  I do not know what "negative sharpening" is nor what 0 to -50 or from -50 to -100 means.  Perhaps I can Google what this means and how to do this.  I don't even remember what editing program I had when the problem pictures were taken. Certainly not the full version of Photoshop!  Thanks again!

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LEGEND ,
Jun 01, 2023 Jun 01, 2023

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LightRoom (this is the LightRoom Classic forum, Diane) really isn't the tool for a job like selectively editing aberrations like these, but I really wouldn't want to to it with PhotoShop either.

 

Far better to go back to the original RAW files and re-convert them, without the excessive sharpening.

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Community Expert ,
May 30, 2023 May 30, 2023

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We'll definitely need to see a photo to know what you mean exactly. Some camera and lens details too as there may be a solution before even getting to the post processing. 

Sean McCormack. Author of 'Essential Development 3'. Magazine Writer. Former Official Fuji X-Photographer.

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Community Expert ,
Jun 01, 2023 Jun 01, 2023

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If the images are RGB (JPG, TIFF) then removing the halos (embedded in the pixel data of the image) will be near impossible without the frustration you mention.

Like you are "Up the creek without a paddle" and no tool, in either LrC or Ps, will do the job easily.

 

Regards. My System: Windows-11, Lightroom-Classic 14.2 Photoshop 26.3, ACR 17.2, Lightroom 8.2, Lr-iOS 9.0.1, Bridge 15.0.2, .

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Participant ,
Jun 01, 2023 Jun 01, 2023

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Thanks.  Not a lot of them I'm considering using, but I work really quickly with cloning so I'll get through it a few times more.  Thanks again!

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