Dale Anthony Smith
December 16th, 2003, 03:19 PM
I just finished transferring some footage from my camera to a safety/edit copy on my DV deck. The deck displays on a regular monitor and to my horror, there is a dust speck on all of my .6 Wide Angle footage. I checked the adapter... clean. I checked the lens.. voila a large particle.
I didn't see the speck in the viewfinder and I was doing mostly on the go shooting, so I didn't use a large field monitor.
The fact that the on-camera lens goes to MACRO when the .6 adapter is employed made it focus on the dust speck more closely.
It isn't noticable on my static shots or shots with a lot of detail, but on moving shots with sky or white walls it's unuseable.
My question...
Is there a post method that (like in Photoshop) can replace pixels in a spot with pixels that surround it?
The solution is to make sure you don't have any dust on the lens or bring a field monitor.. I know. I plan to reshoot the unuseable scenes after an almost final cut so I don't have to reshoot everything, but it would be nice if there was a program function that could do it relatively inexpensively.
Thanks
I didn't see the speck in the viewfinder and I was doing mostly on the go shooting, so I didn't use a large field monitor.
The fact that the on-camera lens goes to MACRO when the .6 adapter is employed made it focus on the dust speck more closely.
It isn't noticable on my static shots or shots with a lot of detail, but on moving shots with sky or white walls it's unuseable.
My question...
Is there a post method that (like in Photoshop) can replace pixels in a spot with pixels that surround it?
The solution is to make sure you don't have any dust on the lens or bring a field monitor.. I know. I plan to reshoot the unuseable scenes after an almost final cut so I don't have to reshoot everything, but it would be nice if there was a program function that could do it relatively inexpensively.
Thanks