HOW TO Shoot and edit Cinematic mode footage
1 Point and shoot
In the Camera app, swipe to choose the Cinematic mode. A yellow tracking box automatically follows the closest subject’s face. The background is blurred. If the subject leaves the frame, the background becomes sharp.
2 Auto pull focus
The camera focuses on the closest face. If the person turns away from the camera it automatically focuses on the background person. It will refocus on the foreground person when they turn to face the camera.
3 Tracking lock
Double–tap on a person or object to activate AF Tracking Lock. Although the camera might recognize the presence of background subjects, it will stay focused on the chosen person or object, even if they move.
4 Take control
The camera places gray rectangles around other people it spots in the background of the shot. During recording you can tap on any of these gray rectangles to turn them yellow and change the focal point.
5 Depth of field
Tap the ‘f’ icon to summon the Depth slider. Drag this to change the amount of background or foreground blur. A smaller number (such as f2.0) creates a stronger blur. A larger number (f16) creates a weaker blur.
6 Edit clips
In the Photos app go to Albums. Tap on the Cinematic album to find all clips shot in Cinematic mode. Tap to choose a clip. Tap Edit, and you’ll see a yellow rectangle indicating which person or object is in focus.
7 Change focus
Blurred faces are marked by gray rectangles. Scrub the playhead to where you want to pull focus to a different person. Tap to turn their rectangle yellow. Double–tap to ensure the camera continues to track them.
8 Share to Mac
To edit a Cinematic mode clip on your Mac, tap the Share icon. Tap Options and toggle on All Photos Data. Tap Done. Tap AirDrop and select your Mac. On your Mac, click Accept then choose the ‘Save to Downloads’ option.
9 Edit clip
In iMovie, click Import Media. Browse to the Downloads folder. Choose the ‘.MOV’ version. Add it to the timeline. Click the Cinematic camera icon. Adjust Depth and click rectangles to change focus points.