Hi Slobodan,
I presume you mean Colour Aliasing and not Chromatic Aberration?
To be serious, it can be removed using the Moiré brush, but I didn't care to do it. I would fix that before I made a print.
This was shot on an outing with my photo club, and the reason I used the "Blad" was mainly that neither of the young ladies in the pictures had her camera. The older one forgot to charge the battery and the younger one was coming straight from a soccer match and didn't have the opportunity to collect her camera. There were some issues with time planning at the photo club. So I lent my Sony to the ladies and fell back on the "Blad". Yeah, I missed some shots.
The main reason I posted those images was that I have not shoot any portraits for 40 years and have very little ideas about processing for skin tones. I did process the images to my liking, but I am sort of interested in learning more.
Sorry for the lengthy answer. I could just sent a smiling face :-)
Your response is much appreciated, as always-
Best regards
Erik
When I look at those pictures, the first thing I see is that strand of hair with CA