Excellent video, but it may have been worth mentioning that when using "Self-timer", that the iPhone takes a burst of photos; plus photos taken with Self-timer have less post processing done by the camera.
@@osXcanada Yes, if you turn off "live mode" and use the self timer, it will take a burst of photos. Go into edit mode on a photo and you can select your key photo (or keep all of them). It's great for self timer action shots.
Great video! Very well done. Question: I have a iPhone 14 Pro Max and all my night photos have lens flare issues. (repeated lens flares). Surprised you didn't mention that.
@@iVegNagon Yeah, that’s what I do as well. I was hoping you had some secret to work around it. It’s especially bad shooting video at night. (crossing my fingers they improve this with the new iPhone 16)
@@mitchlewis535 Even my i11 Pro had this issue. Apple supposedly has an anti-reflective coating on these lenses. I am doubtful this issue can be remedied.
If you use ProwRaw does it need manual editing or can you leave it as it is and what would be better for me JPEG or ProRaw without using further editing
Apple ProRAW offers the flexibility of RAW files while applying some in-camera processing. If you prefer minimal editing, JPEG may be more suitable. However, for greater control and image quality, ProRAW is a solid choice.
Going through your script i can imagine you wanted this video to be straightforward easy to understand and concise for beginners, that was all that and above maybe do an astrophotography tutorial , you can get some decent results
I have an iPhone 15 Pro Max and have never been able to achieve a decent photo in low light. So much so, that if I’m going to a gathering, a museum, or any indoor event, I take a cheap, but real camera. IPhones take superb photos in perfect conditions with natural light, but, otherwise I have been enormously disappointed and don’t get the hype which simply is not the reality. Only last night my wife took pics of my daughter’s birthday gathering on her iPhone 14 Pro max: the photos are not clear, faces not recognisable, and not usable.
@@tdurb0 yep it’s a bit old, mines only an XS so even older and it’s not great in low light. My husband has the 15 Pro and it’s amazing, got great shots of the Aurora. The phones have really improved last 2-3 years.
@@sue.Hoo123 one of my mates has a Google Pixel 6 ie a few generations ago, and his night sky/astronomy photos make mine look like they were taken on an old Nokia! Thank you for that advice. I’m assuming he uses the night mode ie the moon icon thing? I’ve not been using that due to not having a steady surface to put my phone on. Maybe it’s just me? Maybe the tech is there and I’m just not managing to utilise it? The trouble with Apple is that once you’ve made that leap, you’re kinda stuck with them. So I’m unsure. Thank you so much for your advice. That makes me lean more towards that it’s my fault rather than the limitations of the camera