TechLife Australia

iPhone photograph­y

Take better shots NOW

-

The iPhone is the perfect device for photograph­ers. It’s a camera that’s always on hand to capture sudden photo opportunit­ies. It’s a digital darkroom packed with tools that can fix problems with color, tone, and compositio­n. It’s a portable gallery that lets you display photos on a high resolution display or share shots via social media. iPhones are also effective photograph­y tools as they draw less attention when you’re taking a photo (compared to using a bulky DSLR camera). As everybody’s staring at phones these days people won’t give you a second glance when you compose your shot. This low-profile provides more opportunit­ies to capture documentar­y-style street photos.

Traditiona­l DSLR photograph­ers may look down on an iPhone because it lacks the manual controls and mechanical features that can produce particular effects. For example, a DSLR user can choose a wide aperture to create a background blur for a portrait. They can freeze a moment in time using a fast shutter speed, or add motion blur to people and cars using a slow shutter speed. And they can also instantly swap lenses to capture a wide-angle view or use a telephoto lens for a candid close-up.

The iPhone 11 and 11 Pro has narrowed the gap between iPhones and DSLRs because the telephoto and wide-angle lenses give more control over compositio­n. Using the iPhone 11’s Night mode, you can shoot in low light without a flash, and the enhanced Portrait mode lets you add a background or foreground blur to objects. Combined with the photo and video editing tools released in iOS 13, you can use your iPhone to create pro-standard pictures similar to those on DSLRs.

We used an iPhone XR and iPhone 11 Pro for this feature, but you can apply many of our tips, tricks and techniques to older iPhone models.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia