Houston Chronicle

These apps will take your smartphone photograph­y to a new level

- By Kit Eaton

With Apple’s iPhone 7 and Google’s new Pixel phones putting such an emphasis on powerful camera technology, smartphone photograph­y is more robust than ever. And while phones typically have great built-in photograph­y apps, many other options can be easier or expand your range.

ProCamera is an excellent option for iOS devices. Using this app feels like raising a single-lens reflex camera to your eye: The first thing you see is a view through the camera lens, superimpos­ed with many controls and informatio­n like the exposure and whether the flash is activated.

With a few taps on the screen, you can display a grid to help compose a shot properly and a guide to warn if your compositio­n is tilted (great for getting those tricky horizons straight). You can also control the white balance and the ISO setting and bring up a live histogram that shows how saturated the colors in the final photo will be. There are quick-access buttons to shoot in video, photo, high dynamic range or other modes and there’s even a bar code scanner option.

Most impressive is ProCamera’s anti-shake feature, which waits for you to stop moving before it activates the shutter. In the settings menu, you can control most of the app’s features and select how much compressio­n is applied to the final saved images. In other words, the app gives users profession­al-level control of an image.

Because of its complexity, ProCamera takes awhile to get used to, and the exact features depend on which iPhone you have. The app costs $5 and some features, like a low-light mode to help shoot better pictures at night, are upgrades that cost a few dollars each. It’s definitely worth it.

On Android, one equivalent to ProCamera is Camera FV-5. This app also feels like using a single-lens reflex camera, with similar manual control. Camera FV-5 includes features like a live histogram, burst-mode shooting, exposure bracketing and time-lapse imagery. It also offers choices over the kind of files it saves to your device.

Unlike some other Android camera apps, Camera FV-5 has a profession­allooking and easy-to-use interface. It costs $4.

To edit that perfect portrait or landscape photo, Adobe’s software is the choice of profession­al photograph­ers. There is a version for mobile devices too — Adobe Photoshop Fix — which lets you heal an image’s blemishes, adjust shadow intensity, fix the contrast or add effects like vignetting. There is also a powerful liquefy tool that

can distort the image in a smooth way to pull off some shape-modifying effects.

Mastering the features of Photoshop Fix so your final images don’t look too artificial will take time. Its interface is sometimes confusing, and I have found myself getting lost in its menus and submenus, but the app has built-in help and is free for both iOS and Android.

For those who find Photoshop too complex, Darkroom Photo Editor is a slightly simpler alternativ­e for iOS. This free app offers speedy edits before sharing that selfie on social media (note that more advanced editing features like color curve correction cost $2 and up each).

On Android, the free Fotor Photo Editor app is roughly equivalent to Darkroom in terms of image-editing features, and it comes with an elegant, minimal interface. It is also available for iOS devices.

Polaroid, once a huge name in instant photograph­y, is also on the try-it list. The company is now trying to teach the smartphone generation how to take photos with its Polaroid University app. This app starts with photograph­y basics like how to compose a good shot. It also has videos on how to achieve more complicate­d goals, like slow-motion video or low-light photograph­y. While the app is free, a year’s subscripti­on to the full video content costs $20. The app is iOS-only for now, though an Android edition is in the works.

Quick call

Google has a new solution for those physical photos that you have tucked away in a drawer or jammed in a forgotten album: PhotoScan. This app helps you “scan” a paper photo and then uses automatic techniques to find the edges and straighten the shot. It could be a great way to breathe new digital life into your family photo collection. PhotoScan is free on iOS and Android.

 ??  ?? Adobe Photoshop Fix app, left, and Darkroom Photo Editor app.
Adobe Photoshop Fix app, left, and Darkroom Photo Editor app.
 ?? Handouts via New York Times ??
Handouts via New York Times

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