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sun flare

This is a discussion on sun flare within the Digital photography forums, part of the Photography & Fine art photography category; Hi there, I was wondering if you could help me out with an issue I have that's really bugging me. ...

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    NorthStone is offline Member
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    Hi there,

    I was wondering if you could help me out with an issue I have that's really bugging me. I like taking pictures of sunsets but often I find that some of the pictures which I'd consider pretty good are spoilt by sun flare like a red flare coming out of the sun and/or sometimes accompanied by a green circles and sun hexagons.

    My question is firstly, how can I prevent this from happening? I use a polarising filter on my lens and nothing else. Do I need to invest in a special filter of some kind? Secondly, how can I remove this in post production? Is it easy to do? I've had a go but don't really know where to start.

    I look forward to hearing from you.

    BW,
    NorthStone

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    Do you have an example that you can post so we can see what you are talking about?
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    Hi Iguanasan,

    Here's an example of it. The sun's just clipping the top of as hill and there's a flare and green blob on the end of it. This has also happened when the sun's in the sky and it's quite annoying. Could the angle of the sun towards the lens have something to do with it as well?

    Regards,
    NorthStone
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    Lens flare is extremely common (pretty much unavoidable) when you point your camera into the sun. There are ways to minimize it but I don't think I can explain it near as well as Cambridge in Colour - Understanding Camera Lens Flare
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    NorthStone is offline Member
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    Thanks Iguanasan. Your thoughts are always welcome. I've had a quick scan of that article and never thought about using a lens hood so may invest in one of those. If it makes a minor difference that would be an improvement and would hopefully avoid a stack of wasted images.

    PS, how effective are UV filters? I'm not familiar with using one of those.

    Regards,
    NorthStone

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    I have a UV filter but haven't really bothered to use it much. I just haven't run into the circumstances where I would want to put it on. In terms of dealing with lens flare it actually compounds the problem as it adds more glass for the light to reflect/refract in and around. :(
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    I see. So the less filters the better. Would you say it's necessary to have a polarising filter on when taken pics of sunsets/sunrises? I might just try it without anything next time I'm out and see what happens.

    Regards,
    NS,

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    Polarizers work at reducing reflected light so for instance you can see into the lake instead of just seeing the reflection of the sky. Using a polarizer when pointing directly at the light does nothing as far as I know. I'm happy to be corrected if I am wrong but as far as I understand how a polarizer works I can't imagine how it would help in that situation.
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    I believe that even with a lens hood you are likely to get flares when shooting directly into the sun. the choice would be to either use it artistically or remove it in post processing. that one should come out pretty easy with cloning.
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    Can it be reduced by playing with the aperture size? Just a thought.

    You're welcome to have a go at removing the flare. If you have any tips on doing this do let me know as I have a few pics I'd like to fix.

    I'm guessing that the complexity depends on what the flare sits over and if it was over faces etc it would be difficult or near impossible.

    Regards,
    NS

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