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iPhone Photography School
iphonephotographyschool.com
iPhone Photography School | iPhone Photography Online Courses
Discover how to take incredible iPhone photos that everyone adores and that you're proud to look at years later. iPhone photography tips and tutorials.
Blog
The world's leading iPhone photography blog will help you take incredible iPhone photos that everyone adores and that you're proud to look at years later.
Award-Winning iPhone Photography Online Courses
Take your iPhone photos to the next level with our award-winning iPhone photography online courses. 30-day money-back guarantee.
10 iPhone Camera Settings Every Photographer Should Use
Discover 10 iPhone camera settings for taking incredible photos. And use these iPhone camera features to dramatically improve your images!
10 iPhone Photography Tips To Quickly Improve Your Photos
Discover 10 iPhone photography tips that will quickly improve your photos. Learn how to take good photos with iPhone right now!
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Reddit
reddit.com โ€บ r/iphoneography โ€บ my tips for advanced technical iphone photography
r/iPhoneography on Reddit: My tips for advanced technical iPhone photography
May 10, 2024 -

If you want your phone to shoot like a DSLR then treat it like a DSLR

  1. Use manual settings

Lowest ISO is the way to obtain the finest quality possible surpassing even iPhone's image stacking when you shoot handheld. You can easily shoot auto in excellent lighting but once it's getting dark consider using manual settings to capture at the lowest ISO. I use ProCamera app for it and couldn't find anything more convenient to me.

2) Shoot RAW

Not the housewife's ProRaw introduced in 12 pro but the real RAW. It's accessible on every iPhone since 6s and is superior than ProRaw in terms of detail, weight, processing speed but there's a catch: it must be shot at... the lowest ISO possible! There's also the new 48 mp ProRaw which is of course more detailed in daylight than any true RAW capped to 12mp max but that ProRaw is not resolving all the 48 megapixels (in fact, 24mp at most), it is always using auto settings and it can't benefit from advanced RAW denoising because ProRaw isn't a true RAW. Not to mention ProRaw weighs up to 7 times more than RAW and you can't shoot quick series of ProRaws. They both have their own advantages but RAW has more.

3) Shoot RAW... exposure brackets!

The dynamic range of an iPhone RAW is about 10-11 EV stops. In ProRaw it's about 13-14 stops. But with a RAW exposure bracket you can reach up to 16 stops! You'll have more highlight details and cleaner shadows in extreme DR situations but there's some work to do just like using any DSLR... You'll need to import your exposure brackets to the desktop version of Lightroom or ACR and merge them into HDR. I find Camera M and ProCamera to be the best for shooting EB because they do it instantly while also using OIS or IBIS (stabilization) which is important for minimizing shifting between EB frames when handheld. Most other cameras don't do that.

4) Color calibration and white balance

The default adobe RAW profiles are unsurprisingly color inaccurate. Why is the sky cyan and not blue, why is the skin tone too orange or too yellow? No one calibrated your iPhone RAW colors at Adobe that's why. To solve this problem you can buy an X-rite color palette and use their software to create a .dcp profile for your camera on your own OR buy this profile from someone who's already done that and sells it. I know only Cobalt Image who makes these calibrated profiles for iPhones, I bought one and was satisfied enough. The second part of the equation is the white balance. To achieve the perfect neutral photo temperature you must shoot dozens of RAWs in sunny and cloudy weather conditions (or even with different types of artificial lighting if you need) in order to see what's the most common WB value. Then you create your WB presets with them for each lighting type. Be careful because a WB value from the main camera might not look the same on tele or ultra wide cameras. You must shoot dozens of RAWs using all of your back cameras! And so when your camera fails to nail the WB in let's say a cloudy greenish forest you can use the precise WB presets you created instead of eyeballing it.

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I shoot RAW on iP8 with 3rd party apps that support OIS. When i saw results from iP12 Pro when taken with ProRaw, i couldn't believe how shitty those results were. So yeah.. RAW>>>>ProRaw. It's shame that one have to use 3rd party app to get best results. And BIG THANKS goes to you! I learned a lot from you and you are the reason i still shoot on iP8. I wanted to upgrade to iPx but i'm not sure i can live without touch ID. Your photos made with iPx are result of everything you wrote above. Keep inspiring us man!
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The more I have taken photos with my iPhone, the more I am noticing how the over-processing that the algorithm that apple uses (Deep Fusion, noise reduction, white balance etc.) are ruining my photos. I simply want to be able to turn this processing off. We used to be able to a few software versions ago by turning off the "Auto HDR" switch. Due to the over-processing that occurs, I have been shooting in RAW either in Halide or Reeflex. I am very much so into editing so I don't mind the developing work in ACR and Photoshop. I use a linear profile for whichever lens took the shot which is great. It flattens everything out and I can build it up in Photoshop. I guess my main question is assuming that I am shooting in ProRaw "48 MP." When I open the ProRaw file in Lightroom, there is an "amount" slider at the top. If I reduce that down to zero, am I taking away all of the processing and still have the 48MP photo that is as close to Bayer RAW as possible? Then I can develop from this point? I could try and reduce the amount slider down to 30-40% to give that a shot. I am trying to still maintain details in the photo that often get shooting in RAW that are smudged out with the processing that is normally done on a ProRAW image. I hope that I am making sense here! Thanks, D-
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Regan Baroni
reganbaroni.com โ€บ home โ€บ iphone photography tips & tools for beautiful images
iPhone Photography Tips
April 5, 2021 - I'm sharing several professional iPhone photography tips and accessories that will help you improve your smartphone photography.
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Apple Support
support.apple.com โ€บ guide โ€บ iphone โ€บ take-great-photos-and-videos-iph9bbc8619e โ€บ ios
Take great photos and videos - Apple Support
To take a selfie, open Camera , then tap . Hold your iPhone in front of you, then tap the Shutter button or press either volume button to take the selfie.
Discussions

What is iPhone RAW? : photography
๐ŸŒ r/photography
For โ€œseriousโ€ iPhone photography, what app do you use?
Just activate the โ€žproโ€œ features in the settings, thatโ€™s more than good enough. No app will make you get better results, just Cost a ton of money. More on reddit.com
๐ŸŒ r/AskPhotography
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0
November 5, 2023
Are you guys really happy with your iPhone camera?
As it pertains to photos looking dark, try increasing the exposure. My personal experience, coming from a 14 Pro to a 16 Pro Max, I do indeed see an improvement in the cameras, especially when I am editing photos where the finer details matter. Is it a HUGE leap in quality from the 14 Pro? No. But is it an improvement, I think so. More on reddit.com
๐ŸŒ r/iphone
78
37
December 30, 2024
How to take good photos using iPhone
First off: good light. If you're shooting in poor light, you're going to get poor photos. Tell the phone what to focus on. Don't just hold the phone up and click. Tap to select what in the frame should specifically be sharpest. And while you're there, adjust the exposure by sliding up and down. Deeper blacks will make things look sharper, and phones tend to want to make a photo brighter when left to themselves. Don't use the physical buttons to activate the shutter. I know Apple just introduced a dedicated physical camera button and that was a big focus of the marketing, but if you're after the sharpest photo you can get, do not use that button to shoot. Or the volume buttons. Use the onscreen shutter button. And don't tap it. That shakes the phone, too. Try to think of it as just TOUCHING the screen. Even better, if you have the option, put the phone on a tripod or lean it on something and use a remote to activate the shutter. But, if you're hand holding, don't hold it out at arm's length and shoot. Hold the phone with BOTH hands, tuck your elbows into your body to brace, hold the phone closer, slowly exhale and at the same time you're breathing out, touch the shutter button. More on reddit.com
๐ŸŒ r/photography
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October 27, 2024
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Eric Kim Photography
erickimphotography.com โ€บ blog โ€บ the-ultimate-beginners-guide-to-iphonesmartphone-photography
The Ultimate Beginnerรขโ‚ฌโ„ขs Guide to iPhone/Smartphone Photography - ERIC KIM โ‚ฟ
Essentially what that means is to adjust the brightness of your photo. To make it brighter, and make it darker. If you want to adjust the exposure on an iPhone, you click on your subject to focus, and then you can drag your thumb down or up to make your photo either darker or brighter.
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YouTube
youtube.com โ€บ iphone photography school
iPhone Photography School - YouTube
๐Ÿ‘‡ Unlock the EXACT blueprint for capturing breathtaking iPhone photos! You'll be amazed at the transformation you can achieve in just a few minutes of learning with us. You don't need an expensive camera or heavy gear to capture jaw-dropping photographs. Whether you're capturing sunsets, ...
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Instagram
instagram.com โ€บ iphone_photography_school
iPhone Photography School (@iphone_photography_school) โ€ข Instagram photos and videos
4M Followers, 1,005 Following, 5,111 Posts - iPhone Photography School (@iphone_photography_school) on Instagram: "๐ŸคณUnlock the EXACT blueprint to capture breathtaking iPhone photos. ๐Ÿ˜ ๐Ÿ‘‡84% OFF! ENDS SOON!๐Ÿ‘‡"
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No Camera Bag
nocamerabag.com โ€บ iphone-photography
iPhone Photography: An Overview
A continuosly updated list of iPhone photo apps and photo accessories I use for my travel photography - since 2012.
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Rokform
rokform.com โ€บ home โ€บ rokform blog โ€บ 21+ essential iphone photography tips and techniques to take better photos
21+ Essential iPhone Photography Tips and Techniques to Take Better Photos
August 2, 2025 - A general rule of thumb is that you can take better pictures with iPhone cameras in the newer lineup of iPhone models. For top-tier photography with iPhone cameras, the top 3 iPhone models include the 15 Pro Max, the 15 Pro, and the 14 Pro Max.
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Ippawards
ippawards.com
IPPAWARDS | iPhone Photography Awards โ€“ Celebrating the creativity of the iPhone users since 2007
iPhone Photography Awards (IPPAWARDS) is the first and the longest running iPhone photography competition since 2007.
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Skillshare
skillshare.com โ€บ en โ€บ classes โ€บ iphone-photography-how-to-take-pro-photos-on-your-iphone โ€บ 1564055279
iPhone Photography: How to Take Pro Photos On Your iPhone | Dale McManus | Skillshare
You'll learn all the basics of professional iPhone photography in this course as well as plenty of tips and tricks that you can use during every day shooting to make your photos stand out from the rest.
Rating: 3.6/4 โ€‹ - โ€‹ 8.69K votes
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Flytographer
flytographer.com โ€บ home โ€บ blog โ€บ iphone camera settings for better photos
iPhone Camera Settings for Better Photos | Flytographer
February 11, 2025 - For other iPhone models, you can adjust the camera lens by turning on or off Macro Control (Settings > Camera > Macro Control). Photo: Ioannis in Santorini for Flytographer. Matthew and partner capture memories in Santorini with a couples photoshoot in Oia Village. Most photographers take photos in RAW format (versus JPEG).
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The New Yorker
newyorker.com โ€บ culture โ€บ cameras โ€บ how i fell back in love with iphone photography
How I Fell Back in Love with iPhone Photography | The New Yorker
October 16, 2024 - Where Appleโ€™s automatic editing irreversibly smooths out the digital grain that you get in dim images, Halide preserves it, yielding images that appear more textured. Eschewing the uncanny perfection that marks so much iPhone photography, Process Zero has made me enjoy taking photos with my phone again, because I donโ€™t feel like Iโ€™m constantly fighting against algorithmic editing that I canโ€™t control or predict.
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Udemy
udemy.com โ€บ photography & video โ€บ digital photography โ€บ iphone photography
iPhone Photography | Take Professional Photos On Your iPhone | Udemy
All you need is access to an iPhone or other smartphone with a camera. Thats it! This online photography course will teach you everything you need to know to become a professional digital photographer with nothing more than an iPhone or similar smartphone.
Rating: 4.5 โ€‹ - โ€‹ 33.5K votes
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Apple Support
support.apple.com โ€บ guide โ€บ iphone โ€บ camera-basics-iph263472f78 โ€บ ios
iPhone camera basics - Apple Support
Learn how to take photos using the camera on your iPhone. Choose different photo modes and zoom in or out.
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Lux
lux.camera โ€บ iphone-17-pro-camera-review-rule-of-three
iPhone 17 Pro Camera Review: Rule of Three
September 25, 2025 - Its new sibling camera in iPhone Air focuses a whole 5 cm (that's basically 2 inches) closer, and it's very noticeable. For most users, arms-length photography is an extremely common use case: think objects you hold, a dish of food or an iced ...
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Amateur Photographer
amateurphotographer.com โ€บ home โ€บ latest โ€บ opinion โ€บ i compared photos taken on my iphone with my ยฃ4000 mirrorless camera, and was shocked by the result
I compared photos taken on my iPhone with my ยฃ4000 mirrorless camera, and was shocked by the result | Amateur Photographer
1 month ago - Iโ€™ve grown tired of trying to explain back-button focusing to non-photographers and wondering what all of the buttons do. Yet, everyone and their grandma knows how to operate a smartphone and because my iPhone uses clever features like Smart HDR and Deep Fusion โ€“ the images usually look much better straight out of camera, even compared to the pre-baked JPEGs from my full-frame camera as they arenโ€™t HDR photos unless I specifically turn on a setting which notably slows down my shooting and isnโ€™t as fast and effortless as on an iPhone.