
PHOTOGRAPHY
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DxO Optics Pro
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Exclusive Features
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Optics And Geometry Corrections
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Lens distortion
Lens distortion
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Distortion is one of the faults that DxO Optics Pro corrects automatically, resulting in higher image quality. |
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1. Simple distortion: Barrel or pincushion
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| Most photographers will be aware of the barrel and pincushion distortion that typically appear at the shorter and longer ends of a zoom lens respectively, with continuous variation in between. |
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2. Higher order distortion
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| Complex distortion | |||||||
| Real-world lenses often exhibit a distortion pattern that, even within a single image, varies from barrel to pincushion across the field. The effect of such lens design is to have a maximum distortion mid-field, while the edges display little or virtually no distortion. | |||||||
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3. Focus dependence
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(Nikon D70 and Sigma 15 mm f/2.8 EX Diagonal Fisheye)
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| Some modern lenses exhibit geometric distortion that varies with focusing distance. As a result, this distortion can only be properly corrected using correction models that take account of focusing distance, as shown in the example. | |||||||
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4. Color plane specific
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(Sony F828)
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| Distortion affects different parts of the color spectrum differently (prism effect) and creates the so called "lateral chromatic aberration", which results in color fringes arround high/low-light transitions. With the ever increasing sensor resolutions, lateral chromatic aberration becomes more and more visible, in turn making it more and more important to precisely address distortion for each color plane. DxO Optics Engine includes calibrated, camera-specific corrections for supported lens/body combinations. See also discussion of chromatic aberration. |















