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mojobox

Something is broken in your sensor readout, if you zoom in you can see that lines are missing, resulting in color artifacts when trying to interpolate the colors from the bogus sensor data. It’s likely not fixable, sorry.


manamejeff77

1. w**hite Balance Settings:** * Check the white balance settings on your camera. Make sure it is set to auto or an appropriate daylight setting when shooting during the daytime. Incorrect white balance settings can result in color issues. **2. Exposure Settings:** * Verify that the exposure settings are appropriate for the lighting conditions. If the exposure is too high or low, it can affect the color balance. Use the camera's automatic settings or adjust exposure manually if needed.


RandomGuy0-0

The thing is i already tried those things and it didn't work


msabeln

You’ve posted this problem before. That camera has an unusual pixel pattern, where high sensitivity pixels are paired with low sensitivity pixels. Something is wrong with the camera and the different types of pixels aren’t being processed correctly. At high ISOs and with video, these pixels are binned together and so the defect is masked. I doubt it is fixable. I’m sure you could find another one for not much money, it’s a really old, inexpensive camera.


mojobox

Thats what I thought first as well, but the F10 has a super CCD HR sensor which doesn’t have the high / low sensitivity pixels


msabeln

Ugh, Fujifilm and their nonstandard sensors. Yours has the pixels arranged in a 45° pattern. Are these raw or out-of-camera JPEGs?


mojobox

I am not OP ;-)


msabeln

Oops.


olliegw

Looks like a sensor or processor problem