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How to make the best pictures on smartphone? |
Obviously if you have a device that has several years, and a sensor that captures more noise than the image, we can not do anything ... Still, there are some basic rules that will help you improve substantially the quality of your photos. Truce of blah, got back in the thick of it.
the flash
The use of flash is tricky. If the flash can be useful even in direct sunlight to erase shadows or to compensate for a slight lack of brightness, its use in dark environments can be worse than not enough natural light. Tip: use the flash on your smartphone when you are very close to your subject.
If you take a picture, avoid flash whatever happens, it tends to create defects where there is not even in reality.
ISO sensitivity
The light sensitivity, or ISO, is a key element in photography. Without claiming to use methods of pro, you can follow the following principle: at night or in dark environments, select a higher ISO. If your ISO is too high, your photos will have a lot of noise (grain pattern). You can change the ISO on most Android devices. The automatic mode is not always the most effective.
Vibrations, tremors
When taking pictures with a smartphone particular, the movement of the hands is always a problem. It is possible that your smartphone has an optical stabilizer, clearly reduces the problem. But in general, up to the AF good rule issues regarding blurs and other unwanted vibrations. To maximize your chances to take a nice clean picture, hold your smartphone with two hands and lock your elbows close to your body, so as to be stable.
If your smartphone allows, you can reduce the exposure time, resulting in a sharper picture often. A tip: the mode "Sport" is actually a parameterization of very short exposure time, which reduces blurring movements.
Soft Focus
The self-timer, or timer, is useful to take a picture without moving the camera, because we do not risk moving when taking the picture by pressing the screen or the release button. If your camera application has not retardant (which is unlikely), you can turn to applications such as Camera Zoom FX for example. It's stupid, but it can make the difference especially when the light is insufficient, and that the smartphone increases the exposure time.
With the advent of applications such that Instagram , filters and effects have become almost overlooked with. This is not to overload and drowning all our photos of the effects that fade and make all the identical pictures, but sometimes the judicious addition of an effect can recover a bit low light, correct saturation too strong, etc. Keep in mind that a bad photo will remain a bad picture, whatever the effects applied to it!
portrait photo
The portrait is at once one of the simplest types of photos and the most difficult to master. Although depending on your smartphones, some settings you will be impossible to solve, some basic rules and tips can help you create photo profiles worthy of being on Facebook:
Make the focus on the eye: if your smartphone allows, it is usually a good solution.
Fill the frame: no empty area around the subject, a beautiful background blur plant is perfect. Depending on the quality of your camera or you can not blur the background post successfully or not.
If the subject is in profile, you have to leave room before his eyes, after all nobody is photographed in a closet!
Avoid the sun: the shadows are harsh, the subject squints or gloss front, etc.
If you really can not avoid the sun, put the issue of bias, facing a reflecting sun and stand in front of the subject, back to the wall if the reflector is a wall, for example.
Most current smartphones allow a manual focus, and disable the autofocus. This is particularly useful when the lighting is dim and the smartphone barely carry a tune. On Android, do a manual focus is very simple, simply touch the screen where the focus is desired to.
A foreground subject
We all know those pictures of mundane landscapes. It is a pity that sometimes we are faced with a panorama or an exceptional building, which is desired to capture the vastness and the result is a flat picture and anything but impressive. The solution: add a subject or a subject in the foreground of your photo, to give more depth and so bring out the landscape in question, the real subject of the photo.
The rule of thirds
The concept of the rule of thirds is not really new. It has been used for centuries by painters. It is still topical and perfectly suits the photograph. The principle is simple, the image is divided into thirds, vertically and horizontally. At the intersection of these imaginary lines, we will place the most important subjects of the photo. For example you can try to take a picture by placing the horizon line on the bottom third line of the image, and move your main subject (a person, a tree, etc.) to the intersection of a side of the image. For more information and illustrations, take a look at the Wikipedia page for the rule of thirds .
A straight horizon line
Again, it sounds obvious, but not necessarily to think of it when taking a photo. If you keep in mind that your horizon line should be straight, you get a much more pleasing result to watch, especially on the big screen. What's more frustrating than to proudly show photos of his last vacation to his friends on his TV and realize at the last moment that it is not even right?
The light
Picture, light is your best friend. This is even more the case for smartphones, which have only small sensors that capture little brightness. Try to find the place where the subject is better informed, while not end up facing the sun. The ideal is to be back to the light source without making any visible shadows in the photo. And only sometimes really not easy.
Go to the dark side
Contrary to popular belief, direct sunlight has an impact on the overall quality of a photo. The shadows are pronounced effect, and exposure may be too high. If the human eye can compensate for excess light, photo sensors in our smartphones them, do not. For a successful outdoor portrait, for example, wait a few clouds point the tip of their nose.
Play with perspective
Most of the time, we take the unit in front of you, at eye level. However, it sometimes gets interesting results if we change of perspective. Try for example a light-cons diving for a portrait, or put you at a child if the shooting.
effective treatment
With a heartfelt light treatment, you can sublimate a photo taken with a simple smartphone. Play with the contrast to bring out the most important objects, apply a slight blur to reinvigorate a somewhat flat photo, etc. Avoid against by filters and pseudo-artistic frames, which are attractive at first, you lasserons and give an appearance too fancy to your photos.
These simple tips and techniques you will improve the overall quality of your photos. If you know of others, please let us know!