iphone cases

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iphone cases

The one shot on the iPhone has greater contrast and richer colors, but Taylor's face looks darker. The phone also had a hard time figuring out the edges of her hair and the blurred background effect looks harsh around her face. The Note's has a brighter exposure which illuminates her face better, but it also creates an unnatural glow around her face and body and parts of the shot look blown out. Although the blur effect doesn't seem as harsh as the iPhone's. The Note also lets you adjust the blur while you're taking the shot or afterwards. It defaults to a medium blur, which helps make it look more natural, but you can intensify it to look more like the effect on the iPhone.

The iPhone doesn't allow you to adjust the blur, but it has a new feature that simulates different lighting effects during or after taking the shot, The lighting mode is still in beta, but it can create studio, contour and stage light on the subject, Out of the two special features I think I'd rather have the Note's control over the intensity of the blur than the lighting effects, but it's a matter of personal preference, But aside from the blur issues, portraits of people tend to look better on the iPhone, The warmer tones are more iphone cases flattering on their skin, and it captures more life-like details in faces, The colors in the iPhone shot look more vibrant, and you can even pick out a bit of sweat on Bella's forehead, The Note washed out the shot and evened out the skin on Bella's face making it look retouched..

Same goes for portraits on the front camera. The Note assumes people need airbrushing and defaults to using its beauty mode (at level 2) which smoothed out the freckles on the girls' faces. Selfies on the iPhone were more natural with more vibrant colors and greater contrast. Even up close the colors look richer and the leaves have more contrast on the iPhone. The sage appears to have more depth and detail, even though the Note's is just as sharp. The downside: you can't get too close with the iPhone, it just won't focus. The shot of the flower in the vase looks good, but it focused on the wrong flower (the white ones in the back) instead of the pistils in the center of the shot which is what I was actually aiming for. The Note focuses at a closer range so it captured exactly what I wanted in the shot and even has a manual focus mode in the Pro settings for more precision.

Both phones have a 2x optical zoom which allows them to get closer in a shot without losing detail, After that they resort to digital zoom to get closer, At a glance both shots look sharp, Again the iPhone has warmer tones and the one on the Note looks slightly cooler and the colors are more subdued, But if you zoom in, you notice that the Note's is sharper iphone cases and captured more details on the sign and my face looks clearer, The cooler temperature of the Note look great on landscapes, Some people prefer warmer richer colors, but I personally like the cool blues of the sky and water on the Note's, The ripples in the water appear clearer in the shot of the Note, but the clouds in the iPhone's stand out more..

The same can be said about the shot of the Golden Gate Bridge. The Note's appears to be clearer because of the color temperature and it shows more detail making the bridge pop out of the shot. But the iPhone's may have captured a more accurate representation of the late afternoon light and the clouds are more dramatic. The Note outshines the iPhone in low light and brightens up the entire shot. You can see a lot more detail in the sidewalk and the houses in the background on the shot of the Note. The orb shot on the iPhone has more vibrant blues and greater contrast with less lens flare around the street lights.


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