![]() ![]() Cameras also use a continuous light to help to focus, for example. It turns on your iPhone’s flashlight, lighting your subject continuously. It will determine if there’s enough light or not, and it will use the flash accordingly. If you don’t want to decide for yourself, use the auto-icon and let the app do all the work. The next icon turns the flash off for every shot. When the lightning bolt is on, the app will use the flash all the time. Use the lightning bolt icon to open the settings. I don’t like how photos taken with a flash look, so I turn it off if possible, but it’s totally up to you. 2.1 Basic Settingsįirst, decide if you want to use flash. Now let’s start taking pictures with Camera+. Use this to see some other essential camera settings like shooting mode, geo-tagging, RAW, grid display, and level display.Īnd you can use the flower icon at the bottom to start editing your photos. There is also a plus icon next to the shutter. You need to open the app’s menu to make it visible. These controls aren’t visible by default. You can also zoom in and out, and with the round button you can take a photo, that’s the actual shutter release.Ībove the large white button are the icons for exposure compensation, shutter speed, ISO, focus control, and white balance. You won’t have much trouble finding what you need but I’ll still go over it so you know what every icon means.Īt the top, there are icons for the essential camera controls. The Camera+ InterfaceĬamera+ looks nice and clean. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |