Everything you need to know about using your iPhone Camera to take great, memorable photos
With the launch of our 365 Synergy Project in the Studio Challenge Forum I got to thinking about the photo side of things. I don’t know about you but I am always forgetting to pack my camera when I go out then kick myself as I see a host of great photo moments pass me by. It never even occurred to me to use the camera on my iPhone which is always with me so I went in search of tips and tricks to help me figure out how to use it and get the best from it.
I was not disappointed. I found this awesome site that walks you through the whole process effortlessly and I am delighted to be able to share a part of it with you here today. You’ll find a list of links at the bottom of this post for lots more in-depth tutorials on how to get the best from your own iPhone camera and don’t worry if you don’t own an iPhone. I think much of the information on the photography part of these instructions will be just as useful for most smart phone cameras
*This article is from the imore website found here
Lets get clicking and see those photos in our 365 layout Gallery folks.
Check out this video for a visual run through of your iPhone camera.
iMore’s photography series is dedicated to helping you get the most out of your iPhone camera
The iPhone 4S has an 8 megapixel camera. A megapixel is 1 million pixels, so that means the iPhone 4S camera captures images that are 3264×2448 pixels in size. That’s enough to print an 8×10 picture at 300 dots per inch (dpi), or fairly high quality. (Low quality color images print at 150-300dpi, high quality at 300-600+ dpi)
The aperture on the iPhone 4S camera is f/2.4. The f stands for "focal ratio" or "f-stop". The lower the f-stop (which is actually a larger aperture), the more light that can be let in so you can get better pictures in a wider range of settings. For example, combined with the iPhone’s macro abilities, you can be obtain a shallow depth-of-field (where the subject is in focus, and elements in front of and behind the subject are blurred). The iPhone 4S also has 5 elements in the lens, helping to keep photos sharp.
An infrared (IR) filter helps produce more accurate color, and combines with software that optimizes dynamic range and white balance. So, you basically have a camera that could previously only be found on a dedicated point-and-shoot, built right into your phone.
Quick Camera access
With iOS 5, Apple’s made it easier and faster than ever to access your camera when you need it, even when your iPhone is locked, and even if you have a passcode set.
· Wake up your iPhone by using the On/Off" button on the top, or the **Home button right under the screen
· Touch and hold the Camera icon
· Slide up to reveal the Camera app
That’s it. A button press, an icon slide, and you’re in the Camera App and ready to shoot.
The Camera app
Tap the Camera icon on your iPhone Home screen to launch the Camera app. The Camera app is the built-in, default way to take photos on your iPhone. Even in other apps, like Messages, if you tap the camera button to take a photo, you’ll be taken into the Camera app.
The Camera app opens to a live-view screen, similar to the LCD
display you see on a point-and-shoot or DSLR camera. Controls are available right on the screen to take a photo, set the flash, access advanced options, and switch to the front-facing camera. Other controls are also available, including a hardware shutter and digital zoom. We’ll walk you through all of them.
Geo-tagging
The first time you launch the Camera app, it will ask for your permission to use your current Location. That’s because, if you let it, your iPhone will store the GPS coordinates of every photo you take, so you can always easily refer back to it later. This can be great for keeping track of vacation shots, but not so great if you’re posting pictures online and don’t want the entire internet to know your address.
Whether you choose to enable geo-tagging for now or not, you can always change your mind later.
Taking a photo
There are two ways to take a photo with the Camera app. Both of them will fire the shutter and save a picture to your Camera Roll library.
1. Tap the Camera button on the live view screen
2. Click the volume up hardware button on the side of your iPhone
Bonus tip: If your iPhone headset has a volume up button, you can use it to take pictures remotely!
Pinch to Zoom
The iPhone has a mediocre digital zoom but if you absolutely have to zoom in, it can be very slightly better than nothing.
Touch your thumb and forefinger to the screen and pinch them together to zoom in.
· Spread them apart to zoom back out.
Once you’ve activated the zoom feature, a slider will appear giving you linear control, if you prefer it.
Macro
The iPhone will automatically adjust for macro photos. Just bring the camera close to the object you want to shoot and take the picture.
Note: There appears to be a glitch in iOS 5 that causes problems focusing extremely close for macro photos. It locks for a moment, then blurs again. Hopefully Apple is fixing this for the next update.
Changing auto-focus and auto-exposure
The iPhone camera has automatic focus, exposure, and facial recognition. It will always try to take the best possible photo it can, but it may not always know which area of the photo you want to target.
Changing the target is simple.
· Tap the screen
That’s it. Any area you tap will be surrounded by a white square and your iPhone will automatically refocus and re-balance the exposure for that area.
If your iPhone detects a face — or up to 10 faces — it will put a green square around it and automatically refocus and optimize the image around the face.
Locking auto-focus/auto-exposure
Sometimes the auto-focus and auto-exposure on the iPhone is more blessing than curse. For example, when there’s a lot of movement, or when the center of the photo you want to take is exceptionally bright or dark. When that happens, you can lock both the auto-focus and auto-white balance so that, when you move the camera around, they no longer change.
· Place your camera one the area that has the focus and exposure you want to lock onto to
· Tap the square to make sure the focus and white balance are set.
· Hold the square with your finger until it turns blue and pulsates.
The words AE/AF Lock will appear at the bottom the screen to confirm you’ve done it correctly. Move the camera and take your photos without worrying about the auto-focus or auto-exposure balance any more.
To remove the AR/AF Lock, just tap the screen outside the square.
Setting the flash
Your iPhone has an LED Flash that can be set to off, auto, and on. It’s not a great flash and as will any point-and-shoot camera, light is your friend — especially lot of daylight. If you’re in a really dark place, however, and really want or need a picture, it’s easy to turn the flash on.
· Tap the Flash button at the top left of the live view screen.
· Tap the On button to turn the flash on, or the **Auto button* to put it into automatic mode.
Taking HDR photos
HDR stands for High Dynamic Range and involves taking a series of pictures, one right after the other, both slightly overexposed and slightly underexposed, and combining them together to reveal more light and shadow information than a standard single-exposure photo would allow. So basically, you can see detail in the bright sky and in the shadow under the tree, rather than having one blown out or the other lost to black.
· Tap the Options button at the top center of the live view screen.
· Slide the HDR toggle to On.
The bottom of the screen will show HDR so you’ll know it’s enabled.
Note: The multiple exposures take a short amount of time to combine, so after you take an HDR photo you’ll see a your iPhone say "Saving HDR". If you need to take a lot of photos quickly, you’ll want to make sure HDR is set to Off.
Displaying the grid
The grid is useful to help you align your photographs and achieve better compositions. For example, by using the "rule of thirds".
· Tap the Options button at the top center of the live view screen.
· Slide the Grid toggle to On.
Two sets of vertical crossed by two sets of horizontal lines will divide your screen, and you’ll be ready to compose your shot.
Camera Roll and Photo Stream
Once you’ve taken a photo, it gets stores in your Camera Roll, and optionally your Photo Stream.
To access the Camera Roll from inside the Camera App:
· Tap the Thumbnail button next to the camera button.
To access the Camera Roll from the Home screen:
· Launch the built-in Photos app
· Tap the the Camera Roll tab.
Photo Stream is part of iCloud and keeps the most recent photos from your Camera Roll, up to 1000 of them and for up to 1 month, in a special album that’s stored up to Apple’s servers and pushed down to your other iOS 5 devices. It can also stream photos to an Apple TV
2 without keeping any local copies, and will store all your photos, without limit of number and time, in iPhoto or Aperture on Mac, and on a Windows PC.
Think of it as a photo only (no video) duplicate of all the Camera Rolls of all your iOS devices — including photos you’ve saved to the Camera Roll from email and the web — all in one place.
Unlike Camera Roll, however, you currently can’t delete photos from Photo Stream (that will change with iOS 5.1 later this spring). That means if you take any photos you don’t want stored online, you’ll have to reset your entire Photo Stream via iCloud.com in order to get rid of them.
Photo management and editing
You can manage your photos, including emailing, tweeting, iMessaging, deleting, creating and filing into folders, and even basic editing like red-eye removal,rotation, cropping, and auto-ehance, right in the built-in Photos app. There are also several excellent photo editing apps in the App Store.
We’ll cover more on that in a future article. For now, we just want you to focus on taking photos.
Other Camera apps
While the basic, built-in iPhone Camera app is all you really need to get started, there are several other well regarded Camera apps in the App Store. They typically provide more or better features than the built in app. Here are two of our current favorites.
· Instagram is a popular, free iPhone app for applying distinctive filters to your photos, squaring them, and quickly sharing them to the Instagram network, as well as via Twitter and Facebook. You can also see some amazing examples of other people’s iPhoneography. Read more – Download now
· Camera+ has a lot of great features, including separate focus and exposure settings, image stabilization, enhanced zoom, scene modes, and a bevy of sharing options. – Read more – Download now
How to get more help with iPhone photography
· How to get started with iPhone photography
· How to make your iPhone photography more striking with the “rule of thirds”
· How to make your iPhone photographs more powerful with negative space
· How to take amazing macros with your iPhone
· How to take stunning panoramas with your iPhone
· How to take awesome HDR photos with your iPhone
· How to take great looking portraits with your iPhone camera
· How to take fantastic photos of your kids with your iPhone
· How to take dreamy iPhone photos of your newborn baby
· How to take irresistible photos of your pets with your iPhone
· How to take spectacular photos of your car with your iPhone
· How to use iPhoto to darken and add drama to your iPhone photography
· How to use iPhoto to polish and perfect your iPhone portraits
· All iPhone Camera app how-tos
· All iPhone Photos app how-tos
Many thanks to iMore and Rene Ritchie for this fabulous introduction to iPhone photography. Be sure to check out all the links for lots of tips and how to’s. We’d love to see how you get on with your own smartphone photos so please be sure to share your work in the 365 Synergy Forum.
Editor-in-Chief of iMore, co-host of Iterate, Debug, ZEN and TECH. Cook, grappler, photon wrangler. Follow him on Twitter, App.net, Google+.
Have fun folks and we’ll see you back here soon for more tips and tricks
Hugs
Boo and the Blossoms xx





[...] How to get started with iPhone photography – 1 freebie(s)? [...]
Pingback by CraftCrave | Blog | Scrapbooking Tutorials (large): Saturday, 26 Jan 2013 — January 25, 2013 @ 11:22 pm
You are great! I don’t have an iPhone or any other cell phone but do have many family members and friends who do have them and use them often. I am going to send them to this blog of yours so they can read this. I’ll e-mail as well as post the link on Facebook–think it would be great for Pinterest too. My kids just got me a tablet that takes pictures as well as all kinds of other things that I am just in the process of trying to learn. I wonder if any of the above info would work with it. Maybe I’ll try clicking on the links you provided here to see if I can find out.
Well will repeat myself–you are great!! Thanks so much.
Comment by Carol — January 26, 2013 @ 5:54 am
Love this info! Thanks for sharing Boo!
Comment by Cathy Vernon — January 27, 2013 @ 1:46 am