Whenever we want to capture a moment thatâs special to us, we reach to our phones and open the camera. Taking the time to learn a couple of tricks thatâll improve your photos can pay off years down the line when youâre reminiscing.Â
Using a grid is a great way to ensure you get the composition of your photos just right. Working to a grid can help you create more interesting compositions when the subject is at the intersection of multiple lines and not just square in the middle of the shot. Your phone should feature a 3x3 grid, which among other things can help you use the "rule of thirds" rule and position subjects one third way into frame.
Open the camera app and then open the camera Settings. You should see a section for Grid and guides. Toggle on Grid.Â
Photos are all about capturing moments, but equally that means you only have a moment to unlock your phone, find the camera app and take the photo. With Quick Launch, youâll never miss a shot again. This feature enables near-instant access to your phoneâs camera, once activated all you have to do is double-tap a volume button, and even if your phone is locked, it will jump straight to the camera.
Open your Camera app's settings and toggle on Quick Launch. Now, to take a photo, you'll just need to press the volume button twice quickly.
In the social media era, we want to share and edit photos quicker than ever. Luckily your Android phone has you covered. You can share the photo you just took, and edit it, in seconds.
In the camera app, swipe up on the camera roll in the bottom left corner. Tap share to share to a variety of places or tap edit to make some quick tweaks to your picture first.
If you know what youâre doing when it comes to photography, or you want to learn, try turning on Pro mode. This lets you adjust manually a host of camera settings that your phone will normally take care of for you automatically. If you want to adjust the shutter speed, ISO and white balance settings this is the setting for you.
To enable Pro mode, open the Camera app and change the camera mode to More, then tap Pro. The new settings will appear at the bottom and top of the screen.
Knowing when to use High Dynamic Range or HDR is another way to get the most from your phoneâs camera. Itâs a great way to capture wider dynamic ranges than your camera can in just one shot. HDR wonât always be what you need however and if youâre not a photography expert luckily your phone can enable or disable HDR as it sees fit if you enable automatic HDR.
Open the Camera app, tap the HDR icon (It should be next to the flash controls) and tap HDR Auto.
The settings on your phone can also help your video skills. Slow motion used to be reserved for 80s action movies, but now you can harness its power for yourself to create beautiful cinematic videos. But donât go exploding anything just so you can walk away from it in slo-mo.Â
Open the Camera app and change the camera mode to More, then tap Slo-mo. After that, just record like a normal video and watch it back at a snailâs pace.
To capture more color detail, you should enable 10-bit color. 10-bit color enables your phone to capture over 1024 tones of each primary color â so 1024 shades each of red, green and blue. This results in images with over a billion unique colors, compared to 256 tones and 16.7 million colors on regular 8-bit images. This effectively gives your images greater color depth and makes them more accurate to real life, as well as giving you more flexibility in post-production. What's more, it takes seconds to activate, so thatâs a whole lotta colors for little effort. These files will take up more storage space than 8-bit photos, but apart from that, whatâs not to like?
To enable 10-bit color, open the camera app and tap Settings, then tap 10-bit color to enable it.
If youâre looking to take pictures of people, particularly individuals, then portrait mode is essential. This feature artificially blurs the background of a shot to get the awesome âbokehâ effect, meaning that the person in shot is isolated from their background and really pops. If youâre looking for a new profile picture or ID card, this is the setting to use on your phone.Â
To enable Portrait mode, open the camera app and then tap Portrait, then take the shot as usual.
Unlike JPEGs, RAW photos are uncompressed and free from in-camera processing. While the latter results in RAW images at first appearing duller than regular images, the aim is to edit them later. See, RAW files contain more image data, allowing for higher image quality and greater flexibility when editing them later on. RAW photos are, however, considerably larger than their regular counterparts, so keep an eye on your storage when shooting in this mode and consider investing in one of the best cloud storage services for photos. Most phones with RAW mode enabled will give you the option (or perhaps only allow you) to take both a JPEG and RAW version on each shot, further increasing the storage youâll use.
Right, now youâre all set up, go and take some pictures! To reset your camera to default and undo any changes you've made, open the Camera app, tap Settings and then tap Restore defaults (steps and wording may vary slightly between devices).
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