I have to say that I really appreciate your discussions
Good. I hope they are helpful.
actually I may explain more about the image. The fact is I personally haven't seen any trace of flare on ths photo.
Fair enough. Flare shows irself in several ways: one of them is the sort of fuzzy transition from very bright to bright in the top right of this picture. That doesn't mean that it definitely is flare but explains why some people have queried it.
The essential post processing steps with the raw image are: dynamic range expansion and blue sky emphasis.
I don't really understand what you mean by this. The RAW file already has the full DR of the shot so you can't
expand it. If some parts of the image are clipped to white (that is, they are overexposed) then you have irretrievably lost part of the scene's DR. In this case you can stretch the histogram out to the right-hand end: is this what you mean by DR expansion? If it is it is the source of some of your problem.
The dynamic range expansion is effective in pulling back the near saturated pixels. Then plus the blue sky emphasis I saw this bizzare pattern. Hope the swift change is normal
In this situation it is. A digital image is, by definition, filed as a set of numbers. What this means is that rather than a continuous spectrum of colour shades there are discrete steps. An 8-bit file like JPG (which is what your screen or printer display regardless of the format you shoot in) has 2^8 = 256 colour steps. A 12-bit file (most RAW files) has 2^12 = 4096 steps. In the RAW conversion, whether in camera or in PP, the many steps of the RAW file are mapped to the fewer steps in the JPG file.
A bit of simple theory: raising the powers of 2 is just doubling; a photographic stop is also a doubling: so each stop is represented by 1 bit of data. this has an apparently odd effect - the top stop of exposure has half the steps I mentioned. This then halves as you go down.
So in JPG the top stop has 128 steps, the next brightest 64 and so on; in RAW it is 2046, 1024 etc. In practice files viewed like this would be very odd and the converters adjust the data (the "tone curve" I mentioned in an earlier post). Normally the top stop is something like 1000 in RAW and 50 in JPG, so the converter has to map 1000 steps into 50 - a 20-fold squeeze.
This looks like a lot but our eyes can cope with the effect quite easily. But now think of the effect of stretching the histogram. What you are doing, in effect, is throwing away some of your RAW file's 4000 steps. Remember that half of the data are in the top stop - moving the end of the histogram out by 1 stop throws away a full half of the available steps so you are down to 2000. The histogram always shows as JPG on your viewing device so 1 stop is 1/8th of what you see. With a badly clipped file you can lose even more.
This means that instead of 20 steps to map to 1 JPG step you only have 10. Next consider your blues: emphasising them means, in effect, reducing their exposure (think about it - if you want a whole picture to look darker you expose it less). This also entails reducing the available steps - darkening the blues by 1 stop will take the already reduced number by another half. So now we are trying to map only 5 RAW steps on to 1 JPG.
What this means in practice is that local variations of colour density start to show very obvious changes. The same thing happens if you shoot JPG except that the effect (it's caled posterzation) is very much more obvious. Indeed, this is one of the big reasons to shoot RAW. But however you shoot it will show in extreme cases and your shot is one of them.
looking forword more experience in highlight raw processing related with k-x.
Experience in PP is always useful but the real thing to learn here is exposure: no space here to explain but do a search on this forum for ETTR (expose to the right). You'll find some people query it but the theory is perfectly correct.
Merry Christmas to everyone
And to you.
--
Gerry
First camera 1953, first Pentax 1983, first DSLR 2006
http://www.pbase.com/gerrywinterbourne