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Portrait mode & Nature

I've got an iPhone 14 Pro and have started to experiment with portrait mode. For example, I took a picture of a wild rose bush, mostly just stems & bright red berries at this time of year. But portrait mode behaves more or less as it did on previous phones: it dissolves parts of the subject. In particular, it blurred out some of the connecting stems. So, these pictures are useless. I tried experimenting with the f stop setting, but I got very strange results (eg leaf in focus when shutter clicked, but resulting picture has a very out of focus leaf). I get that part of this is imaging and part is computation. What I want to know is, can this work the way I want it to?


In this image, the top part of the plant is pretty well represented (not perfect if you look closely) but the bottom part is a disaster.


iPhone 14 Pro, iOS 16

Posted on Nov 24, 2022 6:20 PM

Reply
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Posted on Nov 26, 2022 12:01 AM

 Hi tahm77

Thank you for your question, and photo


Re: What I want to know is, can this work the way I want it to? 


Experimentation is wonderful! Yet there is also the need to get know what the software can do best, and what it is set up to do, so we can take advantage of both aspects. Is portrait mode the best place to experiment with nature photography ... maybe so, maybe not.


Seems "Portrait mode" can only work the way Apple has set it up to work.

Software rarely bends to the wishes of users, except for allowable customisations etc.


Seems to me that "Portrait mode" is mainly designed to take Portraits, ie faces,

where there is mainly one large shape and a less important background.


Apple support has various articles online, for us to get familiar with what the mode has been set up to do expertly.

Use Portrait mode on your iPhone - Apple Support

Eg: says:

"Some iPhone models have multiple options for Portrait mode, like 1x or 2x. Just tap the 1x or 2x button to switch between the options. With iPhone XR and iPhone SE (2nd generation), the rear-facing camera must detect a person's face to take a Portrait mode photo"


Take Portrait mode photos with your iPhone camera – Apple Support 

says

" you can apply a depth-of-field effect that keeps your subject—people, pets, objects, and more—sharp while creating a beautifully blurred foreground and background"


Your fine example demonstrated how the the blurred foreground appears with multiple objects in the frame.


Edit Portrait mode photos on iPhone – Apple Support

says:

"Note: To remove the Portrait effect from a photo, tap Portrait at the top of the screen."


You might want to check that out on your example photo. eg: Does it fix the "disaster"


Also:

"Use the Depth Control slider (on supported models) to adjust the level of background blur in your Portrait mode photos".


Might be fun to experiment further with what you can do after taking a photo!


Change the lighting of a Portrait mode photo in Photos on Mac – Apple Support.

says:

If a Portrait mode photo offers a Light option, drag the Light slider to adjust the appearance of light in the portrait.


So experimenting seems the way to go, before finding a satisfying answer to your question.

I don't think anyone can give you a yes or a no, really. It all depends ...


Sometimes those with the expertise make it easier for us by sharing their knowledge online.


All the best :-)

4 replies
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Nov 26, 2022 12:01 AM in response to tahm77

 Hi tahm77

Thank you for your question, and photo


Re: What I want to know is, can this work the way I want it to? 


Experimentation is wonderful! Yet there is also the need to get know what the software can do best, and what it is set up to do, so we can take advantage of both aspects. Is portrait mode the best place to experiment with nature photography ... maybe so, maybe not.


Seems "Portrait mode" can only work the way Apple has set it up to work.

Software rarely bends to the wishes of users, except for allowable customisations etc.


Seems to me that "Portrait mode" is mainly designed to take Portraits, ie faces,

where there is mainly one large shape and a less important background.


Apple support has various articles online, for us to get familiar with what the mode has been set up to do expertly.

Use Portrait mode on your iPhone - Apple Support

Eg: says:

"Some iPhone models have multiple options for Portrait mode, like 1x or 2x. Just tap the 1x or 2x button to switch between the options. With iPhone XR and iPhone SE (2nd generation), the rear-facing camera must detect a person's face to take a Portrait mode photo"


Take Portrait mode photos with your iPhone camera – Apple Support 

says

" you can apply a depth-of-field effect that keeps your subject—people, pets, objects, and more—sharp while creating a beautifully blurred foreground and background"


Your fine example demonstrated how the the blurred foreground appears with multiple objects in the frame.


Edit Portrait mode photos on iPhone – Apple Support

says:

"Note: To remove the Portrait effect from a photo, tap Portrait at the top of the screen."


You might want to check that out on your example photo. eg: Does it fix the "disaster"


Also:

"Use the Depth Control slider (on supported models) to adjust the level of background blur in your Portrait mode photos".


Might be fun to experiment further with what you can do after taking a photo!


Change the lighting of a Portrait mode photo in Photos on Mac – Apple Support.

says:

If a Portrait mode photo offers a Light option, drag the Light slider to adjust the appearance of light in the portrait.


So experimenting seems the way to go, before finding a satisfying answer to your question.

I don't think anyone can give you a yes or a no, really. It all depends ...


Sometimes those with the expertise make it easier for us by sharing their knowledge online.


All the best :-)

Nov 28, 2022 1:21 PM in response to tahm77

Thank you tahm77,

All the best with that!


BTW

Noticed a couple of videos online with some great iPhone tips from those willing to share expertise.:


Nature photography:

iPhone Close-Up Photography Secrets – iPhone Landscape Mastery

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7m6pTRJYWKM


Tips for using

portrait mode:

Take Beautiful Portrait Photos With iPhone Portrait Mode

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x8-v5ArASDU

Portrait mode & Nature

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