Why am I getting a small black patch when I take photos?









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enter image description here



I am getting this black spot at the same place every time I am taking a photo.



I am looking for an explanation of the issue and a solution to remove the patch. I am a beginner and if needed I can provide more photos of same issue.










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    up vote
    25
    down vote

    favorite
    3












    enter image description here



    I am getting this black spot at the same place every time I am taking a photo.



    I am looking for an explanation of the issue and a solution to remove the patch. I am a beginner and if needed I can provide more photos of same issue.










    share|improve this question









    New contributor




    Vishal Lohar is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.





















      up vote
      25
      down vote

      favorite
      3









      up vote
      25
      down vote

      favorite
      3






      3





      enter image description here



      I am getting this black spot at the same place every time I am taking a photo.



      I am looking for an explanation of the issue and a solution to remove the patch. I am a beginner and if needed I can provide more photos of same issue.










      share|improve this question









      New contributor




      Vishal Lohar is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.











      enter image description here



      I am getting this black spot at the same place every time I am taking a photo.



      I am looking for an explanation of the issue and a solution to remove the patch. I am a beginner and if needed I can provide more photos of same issue.







      canon dslr landscape color-black






      share|improve this question









      New contributor




      Vishal Lohar is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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      share|improve this question









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      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited Nov 7 at 14:40









      Trilarion

      1415




      1415






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      asked Nov 7 at 8:56









      Vishal Lohar

      13423




      13423




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      New contributor





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          6 Answers
          6






          active

          oldest

          votes

















          up vote
          33
          down vote













          To investigate sensor dust, perform the following test:



          • Close your aperture as much as possible (high F-number). This makes the sensor dust more visible.

          • Increase the focal length as much as possible (zoom in).

          • Focus on infinity (not sure if the focus part is actually necessary) on a bright, uniform background. I've found that the blue sky works well for this purpose.

          When I had horrible sensor dust, my test photo looked like this (images darkened to enhance visibility of sensor dust):



          dusty



          After professional sensor cleaning through a photography shop in my area, it was almost completely gone:



          cleaned



          In the former case, there was dust visible on most of my photos, in particular in the sky. In the latter case, I have not noticed any dust.



          Both photos taken at F/40 with 200 mm focal length (Sony α6000).






          share|improve this answer


















          • 1




            Do you happen to have such photos of the sky for horrible sensor dust (already shown), clearly seen sensor dust (sompething like OPs issue), "I think there's something wrong with the camera" dust, "invisible" dust and "After the professional cleaning" dust?
            – Crowley
            Nov 7 at 13:09






          • 6




            You can also take this picture in front of a white wall. You can then use the picture as a mask in order to remove the dust in post-processing. You should also clean the sensor but you might be able to save already taken pictures this way.
            – Eric Duminil
            Nov 7 at 14:14






          • 6




            @EricDuminil I did try the mask automated post-processing, but I've found that any automated processing for my many hundreds of vacation photos was producing undesirable results, probably because in-camera processing and/or image stabilisation was causing the dust in the final photo to vary by some pixels. See this question.
            – gerrit
            Nov 7 at 14:19










          • @Crowley I've added the "after cleaning" photo. I have since learned to prevent sensor dust from becoming too bad (always point the camera downward when changing lenses), so I (fortunately!) don't have intermediate examples (yet).
            – gerrit
            Nov 7 at 14:20






          • 1




            @gerrit: Interesting thanks. I must admit I never actually tried this method, only heard that it can work.
            – Eric Duminil
            Nov 7 at 14:21

















          up vote
          24
          down vote













          There's probably something on the sensor - maybe a dust particle.



          You can check if the Canon camera has a sensor cleaning option and use it or take the camera to a local repair shop and have the sensor cleaned there.



          Or you can clean the sensor yourself, but I wouldn't recommend it, as you are a beginner.






          share|improve this answer





























            up vote
            11
            down vote













            Dust on the sensor, as other answers have suggested, is a strong possibility. Another possibility is dust on the rear element of the lens. If you change to a different lens and the spots go away, that's the culprit. If they're still there, it's the sensor. If it's the lens, a cleaning cloth and a gentle touch will fix it.






            share|improve this answer
















            • 2




              Could be dust on the front of the lens, too! That's the easiest cleaning.
              – WBT
              Nov 7 at 17:46






            • 6




              @WBT, dust on the front of the lens is usually so horribly out-of-focus that it shows up as a loss of contrast rather than as a distinct object.
              – Mark
              Nov 7 at 22:45










            • OP's looks pretty out of focus compared to yours.
              – WBT
              Nov 8 at 14:37

















            up vote
            2
            down vote













            Also, try to avoid using very small apertures (f/11 or f/16 or even higher) until you have an opportunity to clean the sensor or get it cleaned - small apertures make dust particles on the sensor far more pronounced.






            share|improve this answer



























              up vote
              1
              down vote













              If you see the same spots on all photo this is definitely dust spot on sensor. To be precise this dust do not touch sensor itself but the filters in front of the sensor.



              To clean this you can try few ways.



              1. Use the "Clean sensor" function if your camera as this function. This will vibrate the sensor and try to get rid of dust

              2. Use blower to try to remove the dust. This should be done on
                switched on camera and directed down the lens mount (to be sure
                dust will go outside the body). Also you can activate mirror lockup
                to have better access to the sensor. And also its good camera to be in liveview mode.

              3. Send your camera to repair shop for cleaning.

              4. And last, try to clean the sensor by yourself.





              share|improve this answer


















              • 1




                Using a blower without the mirror locked up will do next to nothing. In fact, it's worse, as it risks blowing dirt into the viewfinder where it's very difficult to get out. Also, you want to blow up into the sensor, so you don't have more dust raining down into the camera while you're trying to clean it.
                – David Richerby
                Nov 8 at 10:57










              • @DavidRicherby, did you read my answer? Did you saw I mention the camera position? Did you read I mention liveview (which involve mirror lockup)?
                – Romeo Ninov
                Nov 8 at 11:01










              • Yes, I read your answer. You say "blow down the lens mount", which suggests that the sensor is facing upwards; it should face down, as I said. You say "also you can activate mirror lock up", which suggests that locking up the mirror (by whatever method) is purely optional. It's not optional at all: it's a 100% necessary part of cleaning. Further, my understanding is that you don't want the sensor to be active while you're cleaning it, so live view is a bad idea. (I may be wrong on that; something about static charges on the working sensor attracting dust.)
                – David Richerby
                Nov 8 at 11:05










              • @DavidRicherby, sorry for not be native speaker, And think a bit about the sensor. Even if you have mirror lockup this do not mean shutter will be open. And you will blow the shutter, not the sensor. Right, there will be static charge. But otherwise you will have no access to the sensor at all.
                – Romeo Ninov
                Nov 8 at 11:09






              • 3




                @RomeoNinov There is only one correct way to manually clean a DSLR sensor, and that is to activate the manual sensor cleaning option, hold the body facing downwards, and use a blower to gently blow upwards into the camera. Mirror lockup will not open the shutter. Liveview may have unforseen consequences. Never use any other method than the official one for your camera. If the camera does not have a manual sensor cleaning option, take the camera to a technician. Cleaning the sensor by some other method will void the warranty if the camera is damaged in the process.
                – Micheal Johnson
                Nov 8 at 16:07

















              up vote
              -1
              down vote













              It's more than likely a pics of dirt or dust on your sensor. You can get special cleaning tools on eBay that doesn't cost that much. And there's plenty of videos showing you how to clean it be very careful though!






              share|improve this answer








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              T. Jones is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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              • Be careful with "plenty of videos". There are also hoax videos whowing how to clean your camera and lens by throwing them into tubs of soap water ...
                – Hagen von Eitzen
                Nov 8 at 16:16










              • @HagenvonEitzen I love that because it also rids /dev/null of old data cruft (Sony cameras apparently run on a BusyBox Linux).
                – Peter A. Schneider
                Nov 8 at 18:45










              • Hey T. Jones - Welcome to Photo.SE! Can you expand your answer a bit? What kinds of tools would you recommend? What is an example video on cleaning that you'd recommend? Your answer can really be boiled down to: Google it. As such, it's not that helpful to readers. Please add in more. Thanks!
                – Hueco
                2 days ago










              Your Answer








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              6 Answers
              6






              active

              oldest

              votes








              6 Answers
              6






              active

              oldest

              votes









              active

              oldest

              votes






              active

              oldest

              votes








              up vote
              33
              down vote













              To investigate sensor dust, perform the following test:



              • Close your aperture as much as possible (high F-number). This makes the sensor dust more visible.

              • Increase the focal length as much as possible (zoom in).

              • Focus on infinity (not sure if the focus part is actually necessary) on a bright, uniform background. I've found that the blue sky works well for this purpose.

              When I had horrible sensor dust, my test photo looked like this (images darkened to enhance visibility of sensor dust):



              dusty



              After professional sensor cleaning through a photography shop in my area, it was almost completely gone:



              cleaned



              In the former case, there was dust visible on most of my photos, in particular in the sky. In the latter case, I have not noticed any dust.



              Both photos taken at F/40 with 200 mm focal length (Sony α6000).






              share|improve this answer


















              • 1




                Do you happen to have such photos of the sky for horrible sensor dust (already shown), clearly seen sensor dust (sompething like OPs issue), "I think there's something wrong with the camera" dust, "invisible" dust and "After the professional cleaning" dust?
                – Crowley
                Nov 7 at 13:09






              • 6




                You can also take this picture in front of a white wall. You can then use the picture as a mask in order to remove the dust in post-processing. You should also clean the sensor but you might be able to save already taken pictures this way.
                – Eric Duminil
                Nov 7 at 14:14






              • 6




                @EricDuminil I did try the mask automated post-processing, but I've found that any automated processing for my many hundreds of vacation photos was producing undesirable results, probably because in-camera processing and/or image stabilisation was causing the dust in the final photo to vary by some pixels. See this question.
                – gerrit
                Nov 7 at 14:19










              • @Crowley I've added the "after cleaning" photo. I have since learned to prevent sensor dust from becoming too bad (always point the camera downward when changing lenses), so I (fortunately!) don't have intermediate examples (yet).
                – gerrit
                Nov 7 at 14:20






              • 1




                @gerrit: Interesting thanks. I must admit I never actually tried this method, only heard that it can work.
                – Eric Duminil
                Nov 7 at 14:21














              up vote
              33
              down vote













              To investigate sensor dust, perform the following test:



              • Close your aperture as much as possible (high F-number). This makes the sensor dust more visible.

              • Increase the focal length as much as possible (zoom in).

              • Focus on infinity (not sure if the focus part is actually necessary) on a bright, uniform background. I've found that the blue sky works well for this purpose.

              When I had horrible sensor dust, my test photo looked like this (images darkened to enhance visibility of sensor dust):



              dusty



              After professional sensor cleaning through a photography shop in my area, it was almost completely gone:



              cleaned



              In the former case, there was dust visible on most of my photos, in particular in the sky. In the latter case, I have not noticed any dust.



              Both photos taken at F/40 with 200 mm focal length (Sony α6000).






              share|improve this answer


















              • 1




                Do you happen to have such photos of the sky for horrible sensor dust (already shown), clearly seen sensor dust (sompething like OPs issue), "I think there's something wrong with the camera" dust, "invisible" dust and "After the professional cleaning" dust?
                – Crowley
                Nov 7 at 13:09






              • 6




                You can also take this picture in front of a white wall. You can then use the picture as a mask in order to remove the dust in post-processing. You should also clean the sensor but you might be able to save already taken pictures this way.
                – Eric Duminil
                Nov 7 at 14:14






              • 6




                @EricDuminil I did try the mask automated post-processing, but I've found that any automated processing for my many hundreds of vacation photos was producing undesirable results, probably because in-camera processing and/or image stabilisation was causing the dust in the final photo to vary by some pixels. See this question.
                – gerrit
                Nov 7 at 14:19










              • @Crowley I've added the "after cleaning" photo. I have since learned to prevent sensor dust from becoming too bad (always point the camera downward when changing lenses), so I (fortunately!) don't have intermediate examples (yet).
                – gerrit
                Nov 7 at 14:20






              • 1




                @gerrit: Interesting thanks. I must admit I never actually tried this method, only heard that it can work.
                – Eric Duminil
                Nov 7 at 14:21












              up vote
              33
              down vote










              up vote
              33
              down vote









              To investigate sensor dust, perform the following test:



              • Close your aperture as much as possible (high F-number). This makes the sensor dust more visible.

              • Increase the focal length as much as possible (zoom in).

              • Focus on infinity (not sure if the focus part is actually necessary) on a bright, uniform background. I've found that the blue sky works well for this purpose.

              When I had horrible sensor dust, my test photo looked like this (images darkened to enhance visibility of sensor dust):



              dusty



              After professional sensor cleaning through a photography shop in my area, it was almost completely gone:



              cleaned



              In the former case, there was dust visible on most of my photos, in particular in the sky. In the latter case, I have not noticed any dust.



              Both photos taken at F/40 with 200 mm focal length (Sony α6000).






              share|improve this answer














              To investigate sensor dust, perform the following test:



              • Close your aperture as much as possible (high F-number). This makes the sensor dust more visible.

              • Increase the focal length as much as possible (zoom in).

              • Focus on infinity (not sure if the focus part is actually necessary) on a bright, uniform background. I've found that the blue sky works well for this purpose.

              When I had horrible sensor dust, my test photo looked like this (images darkened to enhance visibility of sensor dust):



              dusty



              After professional sensor cleaning through a photography shop in my area, it was almost completely gone:



              cleaned



              In the former case, there was dust visible on most of my photos, in particular in the sky. In the latter case, I have not noticed any dust.



              Both photos taken at F/40 with 200 mm focal length (Sony α6000).







              share|improve this answer














              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer








              edited Nov 7 at 14:28

























              answered Nov 7 at 12:58









              gerrit

              808822




              808822







              • 1




                Do you happen to have such photos of the sky for horrible sensor dust (already shown), clearly seen sensor dust (sompething like OPs issue), "I think there's something wrong with the camera" dust, "invisible" dust and "After the professional cleaning" dust?
                – Crowley
                Nov 7 at 13:09






              • 6




                You can also take this picture in front of a white wall. You can then use the picture as a mask in order to remove the dust in post-processing. You should also clean the sensor but you might be able to save already taken pictures this way.
                – Eric Duminil
                Nov 7 at 14:14






              • 6




                @EricDuminil I did try the mask automated post-processing, but I've found that any automated processing for my many hundreds of vacation photos was producing undesirable results, probably because in-camera processing and/or image stabilisation was causing the dust in the final photo to vary by some pixels. See this question.
                – gerrit
                Nov 7 at 14:19










              • @Crowley I've added the "after cleaning" photo. I have since learned to prevent sensor dust from becoming too bad (always point the camera downward when changing lenses), so I (fortunately!) don't have intermediate examples (yet).
                – gerrit
                Nov 7 at 14:20






              • 1




                @gerrit: Interesting thanks. I must admit I never actually tried this method, only heard that it can work.
                – Eric Duminil
                Nov 7 at 14:21












              • 1




                Do you happen to have such photos of the sky for horrible sensor dust (already shown), clearly seen sensor dust (sompething like OPs issue), "I think there's something wrong with the camera" dust, "invisible" dust and "After the professional cleaning" dust?
                – Crowley
                Nov 7 at 13:09






              • 6




                You can also take this picture in front of a white wall. You can then use the picture as a mask in order to remove the dust in post-processing. You should also clean the sensor but you might be able to save already taken pictures this way.
                – Eric Duminil
                Nov 7 at 14:14






              • 6




                @EricDuminil I did try the mask automated post-processing, but I've found that any automated processing for my many hundreds of vacation photos was producing undesirable results, probably because in-camera processing and/or image stabilisation was causing the dust in the final photo to vary by some pixels. See this question.
                – gerrit
                Nov 7 at 14:19










              • @Crowley I've added the "after cleaning" photo. I have since learned to prevent sensor dust from becoming too bad (always point the camera downward when changing lenses), so I (fortunately!) don't have intermediate examples (yet).
                – gerrit
                Nov 7 at 14:20






              • 1




                @gerrit: Interesting thanks. I must admit I never actually tried this method, only heard that it can work.
                – Eric Duminil
                Nov 7 at 14:21







              1




              1




              Do you happen to have such photos of the sky for horrible sensor dust (already shown), clearly seen sensor dust (sompething like OPs issue), "I think there's something wrong with the camera" dust, "invisible" dust and "After the professional cleaning" dust?
              – Crowley
              Nov 7 at 13:09




              Do you happen to have such photos of the sky for horrible sensor dust (already shown), clearly seen sensor dust (sompething like OPs issue), "I think there's something wrong with the camera" dust, "invisible" dust and "After the professional cleaning" dust?
              – Crowley
              Nov 7 at 13:09




              6




              6




              You can also take this picture in front of a white wall. You can then use the picture as a mask in order to remove the dust in post-processing. You should also clean the sensor but you might be able to save already taken pictures this way.
              – Eric Duminil
              Nov 7 at 14:14




              You can also take this picture in front of a white wall. You can then use the picture as a mask in order to remove the dust in post-processing. You should also clean the sensor but you might be able to save already taken pictures this way.
              – Eric Duminil
              Nov 7 at 14:14




              6




              6




              @EricDuminil I did try the mask automated post-processing, but I've found that any automated processing for my many hundreds of vacation photos was producing undesirable results, probably because in-camera processing and/or image stabilisation was causing the dust in the final photo to vary by some pixels. See this question.
              – gerrit
              Nov 7 at 14:19




              @EricDuminil I did try the mask automated post-processing, but I've found that any automated processing for my many hundreds of vacation photos was producing undesirable results, probably because in-camera processing and/or image stabilisation was causing the dust in the final photo to vary by some pixels. See this question.
              – gerrit
              Nov 7 at 14:19












              @Crowley I've added the "after cleaning" photo. I have since learned to prevent sensor dust from becoming too bad (always point the camera downward when changing lenses), so I (fortunately!) don't have intermediate examples (yet).
              – gerrit
              Nov 7 at 14:20




              @Crowley I've added the "after cleaning" photo. I have since learned to prevent sensor dust from becoming too bad (always point the camera downward when changing lenses), so I (fortunately!) don't have intermediate examples (yet).
              – gerrit
              Nov 7 at 14:20




              1




              1




              @gerrit: Interesting thanks. I must admit I never actually tried this method, only heard that it can work.
              – Eric Duminil
              Nov 7 at 14:21




              @gerrit: Interesting thanks. I must admit I never actually tried this method, only heard that it can work.
              – Eric Duminil
              Nov 7 at 14:21












              up vote
              24
              down vote













              There's probably something on the sensor - maybe a dust particle.



              You can check if the Canon camera has a sensor cleaning option and use it or take the camera to a local repair shop and have the sensor cleaned there.



              Or you can clean the sensor yourself, but I wouldn't recommend it, as you are a beginner.






              share|improve this answer


























                up vote
                24
                down vote













                There's probably something on the sensor - maybe a dust particle.



                You can check if the Canon camera has a sensor cleaning option and use it or take the camera to a local repair shop and have the sensor cleaned there.



                Or you can clean the sensor yourself, but I wouldn't recommend it, as you are a beginner.






                share|improve this answer
























                  up vote
                  24
                  down vote










                  up vote
                  24
                  down vote









                  There's probably something on the sensor - maybe a dust particle.



                  You can check if the Canon camera has a sensor cleaning option and use it or take the camera to a local repair shop and have the sensor cleaned there.



                  Or you can clean the sensor yourself, but I wouldn't recommend it, as you are a beginner.






                  share|improve this answer














                  There's probably something on the sensor - maybe a dust particle.



                  You can check if the Canon camera has a sensor cleaning option and use it or take the camera to a local repair shop and have the sensor cleaned there.



                  Or you can clean the sensor yourself, but I wouldn't recommend it, as you are a beginner.







                  share|improve this answer














                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer








                  edited Nov 7 at 9:21









                  osullic

                  5,47311021




                  5,47311021










                  answered Nov 7 at 9:18









                  Alexander von Wernherr

                  680112




                  680112




















                      up vote
                      11
                      down vote













                      Dust on the sensor, as other answers have suggested, is a strong possibility. Another possibility is dust on the rear element of the lens. If you change to a different lens and the spots go away, that's the culprit. If they're still there, it's the sensor. If it's the lens, a cleaning cloth and a gentle touch will fix it.






                      share|improve this answer
















                      • 2




                        Could be dust on the front of the lens, too! That's the easiest cleaning.
                        – WBT
                        Nov 7 at 17:46






                      • 6




                        @WBT, dust on the front of the lens is usually so horribly out-of-focus that it shows up as a loss of contrast rather than as a distinct object.
                        – Mark
                        Nov 7 at 22:45










                      • OP's looks pretty out of focus compared to yours.
                        – WBT
                        Nov 8 at 14:37














                      up vote
                      11
                      down vote













                      Dust on the sensor, as other answers have suggested, is a strong possibility. Another possibility is dust on the rear element of the lens. If you change to a different lens and the spots go away, that's the culprit. If they're still there, it's the sensor. If it's the lens, a cleaning cloth and a gentle touch will fix it.






                      share|improve this answer
















                      • 2




                        Could be dust on the front of the lens, too! That's the easiest cleaning.
                        – WBT
                        Nov 7 at 17:46






                      • 6




                        @WBT, dust on the front of the lens is usually so horribly out-of-focus that it shows up as a loss of contrast rather than as a distinct object.
                        – Mark
                        Nov 7 at 22:45










                      • OP's looks pretty out of focus compared to yours.
                        – WBT
                        Nov 8 at 14:37












                      up vote
                      11
                      down vote










                      up vote
                      11
                      down vote









                      Dust on the sensor, as other answers have suggested, is a strong possibility. Another possibility is dust on the rear element of the lens. If you change to a different lens and the spots go away, that's the culprit. If they're still there, it's the sensor. If it's the lens, a cleaning cloth and a gentle touch will fix it.






                      share|improve this answer












                      Dust on the sensor, as other answers have suggested, is a strong possibility. Another possibility is dust on the rear element of the lens. If you change to a different lens and the spots go away, that's the culprit. If they're still there, it's the sensor. If it's the lens, a cleaning cloth and a gentle touch will fix it.







                      share|improve this answer












                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer










                      answered Nov 7 at 14:13









                      Pete Becker

                      237126




                      237126







                      • 2




                        Could be dust on the front of the lens, too! That's the easiest cleaning.
                        – WBT
                        Nov 7 at 17:46






                      • 6




                        @WBT, dust on the front of the lens is usually so horribly out-of-focus that it shows up as a loss of contrast rather than as a distinct object.
                        – Mark
                        Nov 7 at 22:45










                      • OP's looks pretty out of focus compared to yours.
                        – WBT
                        Nov 8 at 14:37












                      • 2




                        Could be dust on the front of the lens, too! That's the easiest cleaning.
                        – WBT
                        Nov 7 at 17:46






                      • 6




                        @WBT, dust on the front of the lens is usually so horribly out-of-focus that it shows up as a loss of contrast rather than as a distinct object.
                        – Mark
                        Nov 7 at 22:45










                      • OP's looks pretty out of focus compared to yours.
                        – WBT
                        Nov 8 at 14:37







                      2




                      2




                      Could be dust on the front of the lens, too! That's the easiest cleaning.
                      – WBT
                      Nov 7 at 17:46




                      Could be dust on the front of the lens, too! That's the easiest cleaning.
                      – WBT
                      Nov 7 at 17:46




                      6




                      6




                      @WBT, dust on the front of the lens is usually so horribly out-of-focus that it shows up as a loss of contrast rather than as a distinct object.
                      – Mark
                      Nov 7 at 22:45




                      @WBT, dust on the front of the lens is usually so horribly out-of-focus that it shows up as a loss of contrast rather than as a distinct object.
                      – Mark
                      Nov 7 at 22:45












                      OP's looks pretty out of focus compared to yours.
                      – WBT
                      Nov 8 at 14:37




                      OP's looks pretty out of focus compared to yours.
                      – WBT
                      Nov 8 at 14:37










                      up vote
                      2
                      down vote













                      Also, try to avoid using very small apertures (f/11 or f/16 or even higher) until you have an opportunity to clean the sensor or get it cleaned - small apertures make dust particles on the sensor far more pronounced.






                      share|improve this answer
























                        up vote
                        2
                        down vote













                        Also, try to avoid using very small apertures (f/11 or f/16 or even higher) until you have an opportunity to clean the sensor or get it cleaned - small apertures make dust particles on the sensor far more pronounced.






                        share|improve this answer






















                          up vote
                          2
                          down vote










                          up vote
                          2
                          down vote









                          Also, try to avoid using very small apertures (f/11 or f/16 or even higher) until you have an opportunity to clean the sensor or get it cleaned - small apertures make dust particles on the sensor far more pronounced.






                          share|improve this answer












                          Also, try to avoid using very small apertures (f/11 or f/16 or even higher) until you have an opportunity to clean the sensor or get it cleaned - small apertures make dust particles on the sensor far more pronounced.







                          share|improve this answer












                          share|improve this answer



                          share|improve this answer










                          answered Nov 7 at 10:27









                          rackandboneman

                          55428




                          55428




















                              up vote
                              1
                              down vote













                              If you see the same spots on all photo this is definitely dust spot on sensor. To be precise this dust do not touch sensor itself but the filters in front of the sensor.



                              To clean this you can try few ways.



                              1. Use the "Clean sensor" function if your camera as this function. This will vibrate the sensor and try to get rid of dust

                              2. Use blower to try to remove the dust. This should be done on
                                switched on camera and directed down the lens mount (to be sure
                                dust will go outside the body). Also you can activate mirror lockup
                                to have better access to the sensor. And also its good camera to be in liveview mode.

                              3. Send your camera to repair shop for cleaning.

                              4. And last, try to clean the sensor by yourself.





                              share|improve this answer


















                              • 1




                                Using a blower without the mirror locked up will do next to nothing. In fact, it's worse, as it risks blowing dirt into the viewfinder where it's very difficult to get out. Also, you want to blow up into the sensor, so you don't have more dust raining down into the camera while you're trying to clean it.
                                – David Richerby
                                Nov 8 at 10:57










                              • @DavidRicherby, did you read my answer? Did you saw I mention the camera position? Did you read I mention liveview (which involve mirror lockup)?
                                – Romeo Ninov
                                Nov 8 at 11:01










                              • Yes, I read your answer. You say "blow down the lens mount", which suggests that the sensor is facing upwards; it should face down, as I said. You say "also you can activate mirror lock up", which suggests that locking up the mirror (by whatever method) is purely optional. It's not optional at all: it's a 100% necessary part of cleaning. Further, my understanding is that you don't want the sensor to be active while you're cleaning it, so live view is a bad idea. (I may be wrong on that; something about static charges on the working sensor attracting dust.)
                                – David Richerby
                                Nov 8 at 11:05










                              • @DavidRicherby, sorry for not be native speaker, And think a bit about the sensor. Even if you have mirror lockup this do not mean shutter will be open. And you will blow the shutter, not the sensor. Right, there will be static charge. But otherwise you will have no access to the sensor at all.
                                – Romeo Ninov
                                Nov 8 at 11:09






                              • 3




                                @RomeoNinov There is only one correct way to manually clean a DSLR sensor, and that is to activate the manual sensor cleaning option, hold the body facing downwards, and use a blower to gently blow upwards into the camera. Mirror lockup will not open the shutter. Liveview may have unforseen consequences. Never use any other method than the official one for your camera. If the camera does not have a manual sensor cleaning option, take the camera to a technician. Cleaning the sensor by some other method will void the warranty if the camera is damaged in the process.
                                – Micheal Johnson
                                Nov 8 at 16:07














                              up vote
                              1
                              down vote













                              If you see the same spots on all photo this is definitely dust spot on sensor. To be precise this dust do not touch sensor itself but the filters in front of the sensor.



                              To clean this you can try few ways.



                              1. Use the "Clean sensor" function if your camera as this function. This will vibrate the sensor and try to get rid of dust

                              2. Use blower to try to remove the dust. This should be done on
                                switched on camera and directed down the lens mount (to be sure
                                dust will go outside the body). Also you can activate mirror lockup
                                to have better access to the sensor. And also its good camera to be in liveview mode.

                              3. Send your camera to repair shop for cleaning.

                              4. And last, try to clean the sensor by yourself.





                              share|improve this answer


















                              • 1




                                Using a blower without the mirror locked up will do next to nothing. In fact, it's worse, as it risks blowing dirt into the viewfinder where it's very difficult to get out. Also, you want to blow up into the sensor, so you don't have more dust raining down into the camera while you're trying to clean it.
                                – David Richerby
                                Nov 8 at 10:57










                              • @DavidRicherby, did you read my answer? Did you saw I mention the camera position? Did you read I mention liveview (which involve mirror lockup)?
                                – Romeo Ninov
                                Nov 8 at 11:01










                              • Yes, I read your answer. You say "blow down the lens mount", which suggests that the sensor is facing upwards; it should face down, as I said. You say "also you can activate mirror lock up", which suggests that locking up the mirror (by whatever method) is purely optional. It's not optional at all: it's a 100% necessary part of cleaning. Further, my understanding is that you don't want the sensor to be active while you're cleaning it, so live view is a bad idea. (I may be wrong on that; something about static charges on the working sensor attracting dust.)
                                – David Richerby
                                Nov 8 at 11:05










                              • @DavidRicherby, sorry for not be native speaker, And think a bit about the sensor. Even if you have mirror lockup this do not mean shutter will be open. And you will blow the shutter, not the sensor. Right, there will be static charge. But otherwise you will have no access to the sensor at all.
                                – Romeo Ninov
                                Nov 8 at 11:09






                              • 3




                                @RomeoNinov There is only one correct way to manually clean a DSLR sensor, and that is to activate the manual sensor cleaning option, hold the body facing downwards, and use a blower to gently blow upwards into the camera. Mirror lockup will not open the shutter. Liveview may have unforseen consequences. Never use any other method than the official one for your camera. If the camera does not have a manual sensor cleaning option, take the camera to a technician. Cleaning the sensor by some other method will void the warranty if the camera is damaged in the process.
                                – Micheal Johnson
                                Nov 8 at 16:07












                              up vote
                              1
                              down vote










                              up vote
                              1
                              down vote









                              If you see the same spots on all photo this is definitely dust spot on sensor. To be precise this dust do not touch sensor itself but the filters in front of the sensor.



                              To clean this you can try few ways.



                              1. Use the "Clean sensor" function if your camera as this function. This will vibrate the sensor and try to get rid of dust

                              2. Use blower to try to remove the dust. This should be done on
                                switched on camera and directed down the lens mount (to be sure
                                dust will go outside the body). Also you can activate mirror lockup
                                to have better access to the sensor. And also its good camera to be in liveview mode.

                              3. Send your camera to repair shop for cleaning.

                              4. And last, try to clean the sensor by yourself.





                              share|improve this answer














                              If you see the same spots on all photo this is definitely dust spot on sensor. To be precise this dust do not touch sensor itself but the filters in front of the sensor.



                              To clean this you can try few ways.



                              1. Use the "Clean sensor" function if your camera as this function. This will vibrate the sensor and try to get rid of dust

                              2. Use blower to try to remove the dust. This should be done on
                                switched on camera and directed down the lens mount (to be sure
                                dust will go outside the body). Also you can activate mirror lockup
                                to have better access to the sensor. And also its good camera to be in liveview mode.

                              3. Send your camera to repair shop for cleaning.

                              4. And last, try to clean the sensor by yourself.






                              share|improve this answer














                              share|improve this answer



                              share|improve this answer








                              edited Nov 8 at 18:25









                              MikeW

                              31.2k873109




                              31.2k873109










                              answered Nov 7 at 10:30









                              Romeo Ninov

                              3,04121126




                              3,04121126







                              • 1




                                Using a blower without the mirror locked up will do next to nothing. In fact, it's worse, as it risks blowing dirt into the viewfinder where it's very difficult to get out. Also, you want to blow up into the sensor, so you don't have more dust raining down into the camera while you're trying to clean it.
                                – David Richerby
                                Nov 8 at 10:57










                              • @DavidRicherby, did you read my answer? Did you saw I mention the camera position? Did you read I mention liveview (which involve mirror lockup)?
                                – Romeo Ninov
                                Nov 8 at 11:01










                              • Yes, I read your answer. You say "blow down the lens mount", which suggests that the sensor is facing upwards; it should face down, as I said. You say "also you can activate mirror lock up", which suggests that locking up the mirror (by whatever method) is purely optional. It's not optional at all: it's a 100% necessary part of cleaning. Further, my understanding is that you don't want the sensor to be active while you're cleaning it, so live view is a bad idea. (I may be wrong on that; something about static charges on the working sensor attracting dust.)
                                – David Richerby
                                Nov 8 at 11:05










                              • @DavidRicherby, sorry for not be native speaker, And think a bit about the sensor. Even if you have mirror lockup this do not mean shutter will be open. And you will blow the shutter, not the sensor. Right, there will be static charge. But otherwise you will have no access to the sensor at all.
                                – Romeo Ninov
                                Nov 8 at 11:09






                              • 3




                                @RomeoNinov There is only one correct way to manually clean a DSLR sensor, and that is to activate the manual sensor cleaning option, hold the body facing downwards, and use a blower to gently blow upwards into the camera. Mirror lockup will not open the shutter. Liveview may have unforseen consequences. Never use any other method than the official one for your camera. If the camera does not have a manual sensor cleaning option, take the camera to a technician. Cleaning the sensor by some other method will void the warranty if the camera is damaged in the process.
                                – Micheal Johnson
                                Nov 8 at 16:07












                              • 1




                                Using a blower without the mirror locked up will do next to nothing. In fact, it's worse, as it risks blowing dirt into the viewfinder where it's very difficult to get out. Also, you want to blow up into the sensor, so you don't have more dust raining down into the camera while you're trying to clean it.
                                – David Richerby
                                Nov 8 at 10:57










                              • @DavidRicherby, did you read my answer? Did you saw I mention the camera position? Did you read I mention liveview (which involve mirror lockup)?
                                – Romeo Ninov
                                Nov 8 at 11:01










                              • Yes, I read your answer. You say "blow down the lens mount", which suggests that the sensor is facing upwards; it should face down, as I said. You say "also you can activate mirror lock up", which suggests that locking up the mirror (by whatever method) is purely optional. It's not optional at all: it's a 100% necessary part of cleaning. Further, my understanding is that you don't want the sensor to be active while you're cleaning it, so live view is a bad idea. (I may be wrong on that; something about static charges on the working sensor attracting dust.)
                                – David Richerby
                                Nov 8 at 11:05










                              • @DavidRicherby, sorry for not be native speaker, And think a bit about the sensor. Even if you have mirror lockup this do not mean shutter will be open. And you will blow the shutter, not the sensor. Right, there will be static charge. But otherwise you will have no access to the sensor at all.
                                – Romeo Ninov
                                Nov 8 at 11:09






                              • 3




                                @RomeoNinov There is only one correct way to manually clean a DSLR sensor, and that is to activate the manual sensor cleaning option, hold the body facing downwards, and use a blower to gently blow upwards into the camera. Mirror lockup will not open the shutter. Liveview may have unforseen consequences. Never use any other method than the official one for your camera. If the camera does not have a manual sensor cleaning option, take the camera to a technician. Cleaning the sensor by some other method will void the warranty if the camera is damaged in the process.
                                – Micheal Johnson
                                Nov 8 at 16:07







                              1




                              1




                              Using a blower without the mirror locked up will do next to nothing. In fact, it's worse, as it risks blowing dirt into the viewfinder where it's very difficult to get out. Also, you want to blow up into the sensor, so you don't have more dust raining down into the camera while you're trying to clean it.
                              – David Richerby
                              Nov 8 at 10:57




                              Using a blower without the mirror locked up will do next to nothing. In fact, it's worse, as it risks blowing dirt into the viewfinder where it's very difficult to get out. Also, you want to blow up into the sensor, so you don't have more dust raining down into the camera while you're trying to clean it.
                              – David Richerby
                              Nov 8 at 10:57












                              @DavidRicherby, did you read my answer? Did you saw I mention the camera position? Did you read I mention liveview (which involve mirror lockup)?
                              – Romeo Ninov
                              Nov 8 at 11:01




                              @DavidRicherby, did you read my answer? Did you saw I mention the camera position? Did you read I mention liveview (which involve mirror lockup)?
                              – Romeo Ninov
                              Nov 8 at 11:01












                              Yes, I read your answer. You say "blow down the lens mount", which suggests that the sensor is facing upwards; it should face down, as I said. You say "also you can activate mirror lock up", which suggests that locking up the mirror (by whatever method) is purely optional. It's not optional at all: it's a 100% necessary part of cleaning. Further, my understanding is that you don't want the sensor to be active while you're cleaning it, so live view is a bad idea. (I may be wrong on that; something about static charges on the working sensor attracting dust.)
                              – David Richerby
                              Nov 8 at 11:05




                              Yes, I read your answer. You say "blow down the lens mount", which suggests that the sensor is facing upwards; it should face down, as I said. You say "also you can activate mirror lock up", which suggests that locking up the mirror (by whatever method) is purely optional. It's not optional at all: it's a 100% necessary part of cleaning. Further, my understanding is that you don't want the sensor to be active while you're cleaning it, so live view is a bad idea. (I may be wrong on that; something about static charges on the working sensor attracting dust.)
                              – David Richerby
                              Nov 8 at 11:05












                              @DavidRicherby, sorry for not be native speaker, And think a bit about the sensor. Even if you have mirror lockup this do not mean shutter will be open. And you will blow the shutter, not the sensor. Right, there will be static charge. But otherwise you will have no access to the sensor at all.
                              – Romeo Ninov
                              Nov 8 at 11:09




                              @DavidRicherby, sorry for not be native speaker, And think a bit about the sensor. Even if you have mirror lockup this do not mean shutter will be open. And you will blow the shutter, not the sensor. Right, there will be static charge. But otherwise you will have no access to the sensor at all.
                              – Romeo Ninov
                              Nov 8 at 11:09




                              3




                              3




                              @RomeoNinov There is only one correct way to manually clean a DSLR sensor, and that is to activate the manual sensor cleaning option, hold the body facing downwards, and use a blower to gently blow upwards into the camera. Mirror lockup will not open the shutter. Liveview may have unforseen consequences. Never use any other method than the official one for your camera. If the camera does not have a manual sensor cleaning option, take the camera to a technician. Cleaning the sensor by some other method will void the warranty if the camera is damaged in the process.
                              – Micheal Johnson
                              Nov 8 at 16:07




                              @RomeoNinov There is only one correct way to manually clean a DSLR sensor, and that is to activate the manual sensor cleaning option, hold the body facing downwards, and use a blower to gently blow upwards into the camera. Mirror lockup will not open the shutter. Liveview may have unforseen consequences. Never use any other method than the official one for your camera. If the camera does not have a manual sensor cleaning option, take the camera to a technician. Cleaning the sensor by some other method will void the warranty if the camera is damaged in the process.
                              – Micheal Johnson
                              Nov 8 at 16:07










                              up vote
                              -1
                              down vote













                              It's more than likely a pics of dirt or dust on your sensor. You can get special cleaning tools on eBay that doesn't cost that much. And there's plenty of videos showing you how to clean it be very careful though!






                              share|improve this answer








                              New contributor




                              T. Jones is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                              Check out our Code of Conduct.

















                              • Be careful with "plenty of videos". There are also hoax videos whowing how to clean your camera and lens by throwing them into tubs of soap water ...
                                – Hagen von Eitzen
                                Nov 8 at 16:16










                              • @HagenvonEitzen I love that because it also rids /dev/null of old data cruft (Sony cameras apparently run on a BusyBox Linux).
                                – Peter A. Schneider
                                Nov 8 at 18:45










                              • Hey T. Jones - Welcome to Photo.SE! Can you expand your answer a bit? What kinds of tools would you recommend? What is an example video on cleaning that you'd recommend? Your answer can really be boiled down to: Google it. As such, it's not that helpful to readers. Please add in more. Thanks!
                                – Hueco
                                2 days ago














                              up vote
                              -1
                              down vote













                              It's more than likely a pics of dirt or dust on your sensor. You can get special cleaning tools on eBay that doesn't cost that much. And there's plenty of videos showing you how to clean it be very careful though!






                              share|improve this answer








                              New contributor




                              T. Jones is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                              Check out our Code of Conduct.

















                              • Be careful with "plenty of videos". There are also hoax videos whowing how to clean your camera and lens by throwing them into tubs of soap water ...
                                – Hagen von Eitzen
                                Nov 8 at 16:16










                              • @HagenvonEitzen I love that because it also rids /dev/null of old data cruft (Sony cameras apparently run on a BusyBox Linux).
                                – Peter A. Schneider
                                Nov 8 at 18:45










                              • Hey T. Jones - Welcome to Photo.SE! Can you expand your answer a bit? What kinds of tools would you recommend? What is an example video on cleaning that you'd recommend? Your answer can really be boiled down to: Google it. As such, it's not that helpful to readers. Please add in more. Thanks!
                                – Hueco
                                2 days ago












                              up vote
                              -1
                              down vote










                              up vote
                              -1
                              down vote









                              It's more than likely a pics of dirt or dust on your sensor. You can get special cleaning tools on eBay that doesn't cost that much. And there's plenty of videos showing you how to clean it be very careful though!






                              share|improve this answer








                              New contributor




                              T. Jones is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                              Check out our Code of Conduct.









                              It's more than likely a pics of dirt or dust on your sensor. You can get special cleaning tools on eBay that doesn't cost that much. And there's plenty of videos showing you how to clean it be very careful though!







                              share|improve this answer








                              New contributor




                              T. Jones is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                              Check out our Code of Conduct.









                              share|improve this answer



                              share|improve this answer






                              New contributor




                              T. Jones is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                              Check out our Code of Conduct.









                              answered Nov 7 at 22:01









                              T. Jones

                              11




                              11




                              New contributor




                              T. Jones is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                              Check out our Code of Conduct.





                              New contributor





                              T. Jones is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                              Check out our Code of Conduct.






                              T. Jones is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                              Check out our Code of Conduct.











                              • Be careful with "plenty of videos". There are also hoax videos whowing how to clean your camera and lens by throwing them into tubs of soap water ...
                                – Hagen von Eitzen
                                Nov 8 at 16:16










                              • @HagenvonEitzen I love that because it also rids /dev/null of old data cruft (Sony cameras apparently run on a BusyBox Linux).
                                – Peter A. Schneider
                                Nov 8 at 18:45










                              • Hey T. Jones - Welcome to Photo.SE! Can you expand your answer a bit? What kinds of tools would you recommend? What is an example video on cleaning that you'd recommend? Your answer can really be boiled down to: Google it. As such, it's not that helpful to readers. Please add in more. Thanks!
                                – Hueco
                                2 days ago
















                              • Be careful with "plenty of videos". There are also hoax videos whowing how to clean your camera and lens by throwing them into tubs of soap water ...
                                – Hagen von Eitzen
                                Nov 8 at 16:16










                              • @HagenvonEitzen I love that because it also rids /dev/null of old data cruft (Sony cameras apparently run on a BusyBox Linux).
                                – Peter A. Schneider
                                Nov 8 at 18:45










                              • Hey T. Jones - Welcome to Photo.SE! Can you expand your answer a bit? What kinds of tools would you recommend? What is an example video on cleaning that you'd recommend? Your answer can really be boiled down to: Google it. As such, it's not that helpful to readers. Please add in more. Thanks!
                                – Hueco
                                2 days ago















                              Be careful with "plenty of videos". There are also hoax videos whowing how to clean your camera and lens by throwing them into tubs of soap water ...
                              – Hagen von Eitzen
                              Nov 8 at 16:16




                              Be careful with "plenty of videos". There are also hoax videos whowing how to clean your camera and lens by throwing them into tubs of soap water ...
                              – Hagen von Eitzen
                              Nov 8 at 16:16












                              @HagenvonEitzen I love that because it also rids /dev/null of old data cruft (Sony cameras apparently run on a BusyBox Linux).
                              – Peter A. Schneider
                              Nov 8 at 18:45




                              @HagenvonEitzen I love that because it also rids /dev/null of old data cruft (Sony cameras apparently run on a BusyBox Linux).
                              – Peter A. Schneider
                              Nov 8 at 18:45












                              Hey T. Jones - Welcome to Photo.SE! Can you expand your answer a bit? What kinds of tools would you recommend? What is an example video on cleaning that you'd recommend? Your answer can really be boiled down to: Google it. As such, it's not that helpful to readers. Please add in more. Thanks!
                              – Hueco
                              2 days ago




                              Hey T. Jones - Welcome to Photo.SE! Can you expand your answer a bit? What kinds of tools would you recommend? What is an example video on cleaning that you'd recommend? Your answer can really be boiled down to: Google it. As such, it's not that helpful to readers. Please add in more. Thanks!
                              – Hueco
                              2 days ago










                              Vishal Lohar is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.









                               

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