- USDT(TRC-20)
- $0.0
Your iPhoneās camera is smartāperhaps too smart. Itās smart enough to relight your selfies and remove distracting background objects from your photos. Itās the kind of reality-altering power that normally requires an Infinity Stone. It can also make it much harder to get photos that are accurate representations of the real world. Fortunately, there are alternatives.
Itās worth noting that itās difficult to get absolutely zero processing on any smartphone camera. Thereās always some amount of interpretation of raw data in order to display it. What we want to minimize here is how much your phone makes decisions about the ārightā way your photos should lookādecisions like how saturated colors should be, what parts of the image should be in or out of focus, and how your subject should be lit. Sometimes itās better to let your phone make these decisions for you, but if you want more control, these are the options that are best for you.
Normally, when you take a photo, your phone compresses the image to save space and tosses data thatās not necessary to display it. But that data can be useful if you want to do your own photo editing. Thatās where Apple ProRAW comes in. This format (which takes up more storage space) saves almost all of the data from your cameraās sensor when the photo was taken.
This lets you adjust things like exposure, contrast, saturation, white balance, and other basic aspects of an image. Thereās still some unavoidable image processing done to these photos, but ProRAW gives you a lot more flexibility to make changes than you normally would have.
To enable ProRAW images, tap the RAW button while youāre using your camera to use it for the current session. If youād rather permanently switch your default settings, go to Settings > Camera > Preserve Settings and enable ProRAW & Resolution control. With this enabled, the camera will be in ProRAW mode unless you specifically disable it each time.
ZeroCam makes the pitch that less is more, especially when it comes to camera features. In fact it only has one: a shutter button. Thereās no post-processing, no filters or effects, and the only optional toggle is which of your phoneās lenses to use. It literally canāt be easierāfor better or worse.
In my experience, images taken with ZeroCam in low-light settings had noticeably more noise, which is to be expected without a lot of post-processing. However, photos that were properly lit looked a bit more natural than with the stock camera app.
The main downside to the ZeroCam app is the cost: A subscription will run you $2/month, or $13 if you pay for a year up front. You can get a free three-day trial (for the monthly plan, bumped up to a week if you opt for the annual plan), at which point youāll probably know for sure whether itās worth the expense to you.
Unlike ZeroCam, Halide Mark II provides extensive manual controls over your camera. You can precisely adjust focus, ISO, shutter speed, and white balance before capturing the image. Some of these controls are available in the default camera app, but Halide adds other useful tools like focus peaking and live histograms.
Halide also has a dedicated Process Zero mode, which touts zero post-processing AI. This is as close as you can get to photos that are straight from the sensor with only the minimum processing required to create a viewable image.
Like ZeroCam, this app isnāt free, although you can get a seven-day free trial to see if it serves your needs. After that, monthly subscriptions start at $10, or you can get a year for $20. If you know for certain you love the app and will be using it for a long time, a lifetime license will set you back $60.
Blackmagic makes the free video editing suite Davinci Resolve, as well as a line of cinema cameras that tie deeply into the software. More recently, the company has released an app for the iPhone that leverages its expertise for the camera you always have with you. The Blackmagic Camera app is primarily focused on video, but you can use it to grab stills from your clips as well.
If you only want still photos, one of the other options on this list is probably better for you, but this app is perfect for videographers. It offers pro-level camera controls like ISO, shutter speed, and white balance, as well as features like an RGB histogram to see which parts of your image are clipping, and image stabilization to reduce the camera shake from holding it in your hand.
Full story here:
Itās worth noting that itās difficult to get absolutely zero processing on any smartphone camera. Thereās always some amount of interpretation of raw data in order to display it. What we want to minimize here is how much your phone makes decisions about the ārightā way your photos should lookādecisions like how saturated colors should be, what parts of the image should be in or out of focus, and how your subject should be lit. Sometimes itās better to let your phone make these decisions for you, but if you want more control, these are the options that are best for you.
Get more flexibility with Apple ProRAW
Normally, when you take a photo, your phone compresses the image to save space and tosses data thatās not necessary to display it. But that data can be useful if you want to do your own photo editing. Thatās where Apple ProRAW comes in. This format (which takes up more storage space) saves almost all of the data from your cameraās sensor when the photo was taken.
This lets you adjust things like exposure, contrast, saturation, white balance, and other basic aspects of an image. Thereās still some unavoidable image processing done to these photos, but ProRAW gives you a lot more flexibility to make changes than you normally would have.
To enable ProRAW images, tap the RAW button while youāre using your camera to use it for the current session. If youād rather permanently switch your default settings, go to Settings > Camera > Preserve Settings and enable ProRAW & Resolution control. With this enabled, the camera will be in ProRAW mode unless you specifically disable it each time.
Use ZeroCam, the anti-AI camera app
ZeroCam makes the pitch that less is more, especially when it comes to camera features. In fact it only has one: a shutter button. Thereās no post-processing, no filters or effects, and the only optional toggle is which of your phoneās lenses to use. It literally canāt be easierāfor better or worse.
In my experience, images taken with ZeroCam in low-light settings had noticeably more noise, which is to be expected without a lot of post-processing. However, photos that were properly lit looked a bit more natural than with the stock camera app.
The main downside to the ZeroCam app is the cost: A subscription will run you $2/month, or $13 if you pay for a year up front. You can get a free three-day trial (for the monthly plan, bumped up to a week if you opt for the annual plan), at which point youāll probably know for sure whether itās worth the expense to you.
Use Halide for more control over AI-free photos
Unlike ZeroCam, Halide Mark II provides extensive manual controls over your camera. You can precisely adjust focus, ISO, shutter speed, and white balance before capturing the image. Some of these controls are available in the default camera app, but Halide adds other useful tools like focus peaking and live histograms.
Halide also has a dedicated Process Zero mode, which touts zero post-processing AI. This is as close as you can get to photos that are straight from the sensor with only the minimum processing required to create a viewable image.
Like ZeroCam, this app isnāt free, although you can get a seven-day free trial to see if it serves your needs. After that, monthly subscriptions start at $10, or you can get a year for $20. If you know for certain you love the app and will be using it for a long time, a lifetime license will set you back $60.
Try the Blackmagic Camera app for filterless video
Blackmagic makes the free video editing suite Davinci Resolve, as well as a line of cinema cameras that tie deeply into the software. More recently, the company has released an app for the iPhone that leverages its expertise for the camera you always have with you. The Blackmagic Camera app is primarily focused on video, but you can use it to grab stills from your clips as well.
If you only want still photos, one of the other options on this list is probably better for you, but this app is perfect for videographers. It offers pro-level camera controls like ISO, shutter speed, and white balance, as well as features like an RGB histogram to see which parts of your image are clipping, and image stabilization to reduce the camera shake from holding it in your hand.
Full story here: