Here the same comparison but with my photo:Here is an example of 12MP dng image opened in Windows image viewer on the right and LR the leftView attachment 149746
Removing the lens hood doesn't change anything. If it was a hood problem, the 48MP files would have the same problem of vignetting, which is not the case.Definitely not vignetting.
Yes you do get some with the M3P but I've had no problem correcting in Photoshop.
Defo check the lens cover fit and then contact dealer or DJI.
It is 1/8000s following the EXIF ...From a photography standpoint - have you considered that since your shot was done in the desert in the middle of the day, your shutter speed could be extremely fast? Like, 1/8000s
The OP's photo might have been taken in the middle of the day, but it doesn't change anything about the vignetting problem. Look up a few message, I've posted an example taken at dusk.From a photography standpoint - have you considered that since your shot was done in the desert in the middle of the day, your shutter speed could be extremely fast? Like, 1/8000s starts having distortion effects for me with my DSLR due to the high speed. The photos where people saying they didn't get the artifact were at sunset or a cloudy environment. I can imagine that the drone is treating the sunny part like a flashlight- the main light source is so strong everything else looks dark. To test this, I would try taking photos in a controlled environment like your bedroom with lights on so that you can get diffuse light falloff at a lower shutter speed. May not be your issue but it's worth a shot. Mid-day harsh light is never an ideal lighting situation.
I can't imagine DJI releasing a buggy product. Must be all of us that are wrong I guess.The OP's photo might have been taken in the middle of the day, but it doesn't change anything about the vignetting problem. Look up a few message, I've posted an example taken at dusk.
I took photos in the morning, midday, afternoon, dusk and evening in AEB 5 photos, and all the 12MP DNG files show vignetting.
This a problem with the profile embedded in the 12MP DNGs (not the 48MP) that DJI has borked or forgotten.
DJI needs to fix that ASAP,
In my own experience, in portrait orientation in particular, the exposure metering appears to be off - it presents as centre weighted or spot weighted at centre frame. This gives a noticeable circular or oval area extending from centre-frame that is over-exposed graduating to less exposed outwards towards the peripheral frame. The effect is like an extremely harsh vignette. This effect does not present on the flight screen FPV, but it does present in the RAW captures.The lens profile is embedded inside the DNG file so is automatically applied.
What im seeing there is not vignette - its a dark area right the way down one side as opposed to darker corners so it looks like some other issue.
LR can't correct it with a vignette tool because it isn't vignette. Possibly a camera fault.
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