Camera Tips for Smart Phone Photographers
- Don’t Use the Zoom – by moving closer to your subject
Why? The zoom feature doesn’t work in the same way as the zoom on a DSLR camera. Rather than zooming optically with the camera’s lens, it uses “digital zoom.”
Digital zoom basically means that the camera uses built-in software to crop away the edges of the original image to get a closer view on a certain portion of the photo.
Without getting too technical, this affects the pixels in the image which makes them appear “blocky.” The resulting image is likely to appear blurred and dramatically reduced in quality.
- What Is The HDR – High Dynamic Range
HDR image is commonly made by taking three photos of the same scene, each at different shutter speeds. The result is a bright, medium, and dark photo, based on the amount of light that got through the lens. A software process then combines all the photos to bring details to the shadows and highlights both. This helps to achieve the same task in the final photograph that the human eye can accomplish on the scene.
- Set The Focus Point Manually - All you need to do is tap the screen where you want the focus to be set. A little square will appear at that point, and when you press the shutter to take the photo, the focus will be set on that part of the scene.
This is especially important when shooting close-up subjects because the closer the subject is to the camera, the shallower the depth of field will be.
A shallow depth of field means that only a small portion of the image will be in focus, while the rest of the scene will appear blurred.
- Shutter Release – Your camera has the typical SR on the screen. But did you know that your +volume works as a SR as well. If you have headphones with volume controls, you also have a cable release that will snap a photo. Great for using when the camera is mounted to a tripod and you do not want to shake the camera.
- Don’t Miss The Action – iPhones and Samsung Galaxies cameras can be activated without entering your pass code.
For iPhones: Press home/power button on your iPhone to power up the screen (if it's idle/sleeping). Hold on the camera grabber icon (lower right corner) and swipe up.
For Galaxy S6 and higher: double tap the home button
- Rule of Thirds - The rule of thirds is one of the most basic composition guidelines in photography, making use of a natural tendency for the human eye to be drawn toward certain parts of an image. As a photographer, it is your way of making sure the viewers focus on what you want them to.
The rule of thirds is an imaginary tic-tac-toe board that is drawn across an image to break it into nine equal squares.
The four points where these lines intersect are the strongest focal points. The lines themselves are the second strongest focal points