The iPhone's camera is such a handy and versitile tool that I find myself favoring it even when I've got expensive photography equipment gathering dust in my office. Setting the exposure is as easy as tapping on the point in the image you want to meter, tapping the sun icon that appears next to that point to reveal the brightness slider, and then dragging the brightness slider up or down. That way you can make the darks a little darker or the lights a little lighter, and create the image you want every time. The Camera app doesn't give you exposure settings in f-stops, or let you adjust aperature or shutter speed directly. For that you'll need a third party app. However, it does let you adjust which part of the frame the auto-exposure meters quickly and easily. Here's how to do it.
Related: Phone Photography Tips: How to Use Lighting to Take More Creative Pictures
How to Adjust Exposure in the iPhone Camera App:
- In the Camera app, frame up the shot you want to take.
- In the live camera view, tap the part of the frame you want to be most clearly visible. A yellow box will appear around the point you've selected. The camera will focus on that spot, and set its brightness to match.
- If you choose a light spot, the darks will get darker. If you chose a dark spot, the lights will get brighter. It's up to you what you think looks best.
- You can lock on to that spot by using a long press instead of a tap. The box will grow bigger and then blink twice and a yellow AE/AF LOCK (Auto Exposure/Auto Focus) will appear. Now the camera will keep the same focus and exposure even if the frame changes. Tap somewhere else to release the lock.
- To tweak the exposure further, with the yellow box visible, tap the sun icon next to it. This to brings up the exposure adjustment slider.
- Swipe carefully up or down on the slider to make the image brighter or darker. When it looks how you want, lift your finger.
- Take your photo. You can press a volume button or tap the shutter control on your screen. I recommend the shutter control, because applying pressure to the volume button can jostle the phone, changing your carefully selected framing.
Top image credit: Aaron Amat / Shutterstock.com
Topics:
* This article was originally published here
No comments:
Post a Comment