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If a scene contains areas with repetitive detail which exceeds the resolution of the camera (1), a wavy moiré pattern (2) can appear, as shown in crop A. There is no moiré in crop B
of an image of the same scene taken with a camera with a higher resolution. Anti-alias (3) filters reduce or eliminate moiré but also reduce image sharpness. |
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Maze ArtifactsSometimes, moiré can cause the camera's internal image processing to generate "maze" artifacts. |
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| Technical footnotes for advanced users: | ||||||
| (1) When projected onto the sensor. | ||||||
(2) In technical terms this means that the spatial frequency of the subject is higher than the resolution of the camera which we defined by the Nyquist frequency. This high frequency detail causes lower harmonics to appear (frequency aliasing) in the form of moiré waves. |
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Article ©1998-2009 Vincent Bockaert and dpreview.com, with permission. | ||||||
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Learn : Glossary : Digital Imaging : Moiré |



