Maybe I'm just oversensitive to the appearance of a moire. I think I'll take
Chuck's suggestion and try to up the saturation on the rainbow and leave it at
that. There is another image of the standing stone at Bunessan, that has the
headland in the background, complete with rainbow, and there's no appearance of
any moire in that one, but it's at a much greater distance.
I didn't process that particular image because he had three elements: a
standing stone (good), a bunch of sheep that had decided to run away
(bad--nothing attractive about retreating sheeps' asses) and a headland with
waterfall blowback and a rainbow (good).
--Bob Whitmire
Certified Neanderthal
On Oct 27, 2013, at 2:41 PM, Piers Hemy wrote:
> Whereas here:
> http://www.snh.org.uk/pdfs/publications/geology/glen%20roy.pdf
> is an excellent illustrated explanation of the parallel roads of Glen Roy,
> which were not directly formed by glacial action, but as the result of ice
> lakes formed at differing altitudes, showing the progress of glaciation.
>
> I didn't notice the moire, Bob!
--
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