Whether you're taking a picture of a dazzling beach sunset or Lena Paul - The Next Morningdocumenting your weekend brunch, capturing it with HDR on can ensure that you get the best photos possible.
HDR, which stands for "High Dynamic Range," is a photography technique that combines multiple exposures of a scene for one high contrast, saturated photo. By taking photos on different exposures depending on the brightness of each part of the scene, photographers can ensure that no part of the photo is too dark or blown out. It's especially ideal for backlit photos.
Traditional HDR techniques require a photo editing software to combine the multiple exposures into one photo. Luckily, iPhone users can skip that with a nifty iOS feature.
Here's how to turn your iPhone's HDR feature on and off.
First, check if your phone is automatically set for HDR already. Go to your phone's General Settings and scroll or search for "Camera." Make sure not to tap the option listed under "Privacy."
Under Camera settings, scroll all the way to the bottom. If the slider next to "Smart HDR" is green, it means your camera has already been set to automatically take HDR photos depending on the lighting. You can tap that slider to turn the feature on (green) or off (grey) — leave it off here if you'd rather decide when you do and don't use HDR.
Then, open the Camera app. "HDR" should appear in the top right corner. You can control whether or not to use the feature by tapping "HDR."
Now you can toggle HDR on and off!
Topics iPhone
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