As the title says, I found a recurring smudge in my photos when I was editing this one. You can see the smudge in the middle of the photo.

At first I thought it was on the outside of the lens, so I cleaned it off. Still there.

I ran the “clean image sensor” program on the camera. Still there.

So I detached the lens from my camera body and when looking through it with the aperture wide open, I could see the particle that was causing the smudges.

I then took a photo of a white wall with the flash on at the widest aperture setting I could (f/36) which I will be posting at the bottom of this post body. There the middle smudge and a smaller smudge in the lower left can be seen.

Is there anything I can do to resolve this? I can see there are 3 screws at the camera side of the lens that I might be able to unscrew, but I have no idea what’s inside or how complex it would be to pick apart. It wouldn’t surprise me if I just introduced more dirt by opening it up.

The smudge is very visible at any aperture setting greater than about f/6.

I appreciate any feedback.

Photo of a white wall:

  • falkerie71
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    81 year ago

    I don’t think I’m qualified to give you advice, but I personally wouldn’t risk disassembling lenses myself to clean them. There are certainly guides online, but lenses have complicated optics inside, and at worst you risk irreparable damage to it. If the spot is too big that it bothers you (which it seems so), you might want to seek professional help. For the time being, I think it’s best to ignore it, or fix it in post.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      41 year ago

      Thank you for your reply. I think I’ll check if there is any local photography shop or studio that would be able to fix it for me. Feels like a safer bet.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 year ago

        Much safer. Ideally internal lens repairs should be done in a laminar flow cabinet (which produces a constant dust-free & fungal spore free wind to blow any contaminants out of the cabinet), but those are a few thousand dollars.