Skip to content

Diffraction & Ringing Patterns

Diffraction is an optical effect that occurs when light passes near edges or through fine structures inside a lens system. Instead of traveling in a perfectly straight path, light spreads and interferes with itself, producing characteristic ringing patterns and sharp edge highlights around bright light sources.

These effects are commonly visible as subtle rings, halos, or edge accents in high-quality lens flares and are a key component of realistic optical behavior.


Flares OFX includes a dedicated Diffraction Filter designed to reproduce these ringing and edge effects in a visually convincing way.

When enabled, the diffraction filter:

  • Adds realistic ringing patterns around bright highlights
  • Enhances edge definition in flares and ghosts
  • Introduces fine optical detail that responds naturally to light intensity

This filter is especially effective when combined with strong light sources, where diffraction artifacts become more noticeable and contribute to the perceived sharpness and complexity of the flare.


In real optical systems, diffraction does not affect all wavelengths equally. Different colors of light spread by different amounts, which can lead to subtle color separation in diffraction patterns.

To replicate this behavior, Flares OFX provides a Chromatic Diffraction control.

The Chromatic Diffraction slider allows you to:

  • Apply different diffraction strengths to the Red, Green, and Blue channels
  • Create color-separated ringing and edge highlights
  • Increase realism or exaggerate chromatic effects artistically

Small values typically produce believable, physically inspired color separation, while higher values can be used for more stylized or dramatic looks.


While diffraction is a physically based phenomenon, the diffraction controls in Flares OFX are designed to be artist-friendly.

You can use them to:

  • Add subtle realism to otherwise clean flares
  • Accentuate highlights and silhouettes
  • Push chromatic separation for a more cinematic or stylized result

As with other optical effects in the lens system, diffraction can be used either as a finishing detail or as a defining characteristic of the overall look.


For best results:

  • Start with a low diffraction strength
  • Gradually increase until ringing patterns become visible
  • Add chromatic diffraction sparingly to avoid overpowering the image

This approach helps preserve realism while still benefiting from the added optical detail.