KevinA Posted December 19, 2006 Share #21 Posted December 19, 2006 Advertisement (gone after registration) What I do when I get this with the M8 which i have hit once so far but the DMR does this also is in PS use a lasso tool and select the affected area than use the Demoirizer plug in and run that and it does do a excellent job of removing it. It is the small price we pay for not having a AA filter but IMHO the reward is there is nothing between the lens and the sensor and that is were the micro detail is without going into a sharpening tool. For me i never want to see a AA filter again Sergio kindly emailed this crop to me, we both shoot aerials and both used the Kodaks, the moire issue is one that drove me to Canon. Fine if it's once in a blue moon, but shooting aerials over a City, I found it was in every shot to a greater or lesser degree. Having to go over 300 + images at 100% then treating certain areas just becomes impossible. Yes they are nice and sharp but dealing with psychedelic paint jobs where there aren't any is just to much. In landscape type work I hardly ever see it, but aerials it's very bad. Kevin. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Advertisement Posted December 19, 2006 Posted December 19, 2006 Hi KevinA, Take a look here Have a look at this M8 image. I'm sure you'll find what you were looking for!
ken_tanaka Posted December 19, 2006 Share #22 Posted December 19, 2006 The m8 is subject to aliasing and moirè artfacts, which in some cases, and particularly my case are very strong, as I mostly shoot roofs with a fine geometrical detail texture (aerials). It also suffers of magenta specular highlights. the other side of perfect definition. This is a 100% crop.Sergio You can run on the tinker and tweak treadmill here indefinitely, Sergio. But in the end I don't think that the M8 is the right tool for your job. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
carbonadam Posted January 8, 2009 Share #23 Posted January 8, 2009 couldn't there be a software antialiasing filter added to the M series that one could turn either on or off, or a filter one could buy? I know the IR filter helps with the color problem. Seems a software antialiasing selection could help, as in the case above. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
tom0511 Posted January 8, 2009 Share #24 Posted January 8, 2009 It probably depends on the kind of photography you do but in my case I rather have some funky moire colors in mayb 0,5% of my images vs 100% images with less detail caused by an AA filter. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
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