1. My phone camera allows portrait mode, i can adjust the brightness before taking a picture, easy zoom in, and flash.
2. After the photo is taken i can adjust the exposure, brilliance, highlights, shadows, contrast, brightness, black point, saturation, vibrance, warmth, tint, sharpness, definition, noise reduction, and vignette. There is also an option to correct red eyes but it doesn't always work. 1. i will be using my smart phone, IPhone X
2. i am able to access weebly on my laptop, not my phone 3. i wasn't able to access adobe lightroom on my computer, i got the app on my phone but my school login isn't working. 4. i downloaded photoshop on my phone and school login didn't work for that either. i am able to login with my gmail account if that works? 5. i do not have much at my house but i could try and use my cats as models, i have a word board and a frame i could use also. 6. i do not have any other editing apps on my phone. 7. you can still take good photos with a smartphone because lots of people may be more comfortable with a smartphone then with a camera. you should still consider the size of your screen and the lighting around you. 1)zooming in makes things behind the subject look farther away and walking towards the subject makes things behind it look a lot closer.
2) zooming in gives you a somewhat distance photo, where walking towards it gives you the ability to get as close as you can. 3) I would use zooming in when i want the background in my pictures. I would use moving closer to my subjects when i only want my subject to be in focus. I got these photos using puddles, mirrors, and windows to create a reflection effect. I got Emily to lean against the window and mirror, and I got Senzia to put her mirror up against her eyes, and I got my other friend to stand in front of a puddle to get her reflection in the puddle
1) The 2 key differences are that walking towards your subjects would make the subject more blurry, and a lot darker then just zooming in.
2) zooming in gives you a somewhat distance photo, where walking towards it gives you the ability to get as close as you can. 3) I would use zooming in mostly when I'm already up close to something but want a clear and very close up picture. I would use moving closer to my subjects when the zoom doesn't get as close as id like it to. |
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