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From my screening experience, D-Lighting on Nikons is one of the biggest causes of halos when shooting aircraft, especially against blue sky. It seems to cause a massive dark halo across the top of the fuselage. Make sure you set it to off if you have a Nikon. Best of all, shoot raw and ignore the internal settings which determine how your jpg comes out.
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Well...I can only say about the settings of my camera. I have Picture Control at Standard, but amended all settings of the standard mode to zero (sharpening, contract, brightness,...).
The Neutral Mode may reduce the saturation and contrast a bit, so that you can later amend on the computer.
However, I think Active D-Lighting is the main issue. For the B732 recently shown in my pre-screen chain, D-Lighting was on, what caused the major halos.
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Originally posted by Svenson Liew View Post
Hi AKH,
Does Picture Control Neutral (NL) also cause halos? I'm currently using this picture control on my D5600.
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Originally posted by AKH View PostHi Kayra,
try turn off Active D-Lighting and have Picture Control at Standard (SD).
Regards AKH
Does Picture Control Neutral (NL) also cause halos? I'm currently using this picture control on my D5600.
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Hi Kayra,
try turn off Active D-Lighting and have Picture Control at Standard (SD).
Regards AKH
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Halo problems
hi all;
first of all, i am.Nikon D5200 user. Well, the question I want to ask is the halo occurance on the plane against my will.
The photo I took is F7.1 / 800 and iso: 100.
I could not solve the problem of halo occurrence in photos that were taken in full manual.mode no editing was done on it.
I am waiting for help on the subject
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