5 Essential Smartphone Photography Tips by admin September 4, 2018 at 3:57 am Photography Tips 13 Comments Tags:..., cell phone photography, huewei p20 pro, landscape photography, long exposure, mobile phone photography, mobile phone tips and tricks, waterfall photography Share This Post: Facebook Twitter Google+ LinkedIn Pinterest Post navigation ‹ Previous Bird Photography Tutorial | How To Select YOUR BEST photosNext › Mastering The Lights Of The Night Sky – Lecture For Beginner and Intermediate Photographers Related Content URBAN PHOTOGRAPHY 3 Blur background portrait photography tips 6 Tips and tricks to learn photography fast on street Tips for Sharp Real Estate Interior Photographs more news from the blog Throw Away Your Wide Angle Lens Lesson 1 – Aperture (Tutorial about Photography) How to clean dust from the inside of your DSLR canon camera kit lens Canon Opening a New Camera Factory in Japan Heavy on Automation BEST Entry Level Beginner Cameras! (2018) Mirrorless vs dSLR Camera Which Should You Pick? The Angry Photographer: The BEST NIKON DSLR !! Nikon Secrets to save you $$ **GET ONE!** Real Estate Photography Editing Photography Tips! Creative Lighting Techniques with the MagMod MagBeam.. #WeLit Learn Trick Photography-Canon 60D Settings for High Quality DSLR Tips, Tricks And Techniques Intro to flash photography/Beginner Speedlight Tutorial-Canon 580ex,580exii,430exii Nikon sb900,sb60 Light Painting Photography Tutorial for Beginners – Shoot from the Hip (Ep #9) Creating Perfect Gelled Backgrounds for Portraits This Milky Way Photo Was Shot on a Phone Camvate DSLR Cage Review for the Panasonic GH5 Dry Ice Photography Tutorial – Create amazing Smoke Portraits Simple Corporate Portraits: A Lighting Tutorial Nikon 28mm f/1.4 Lens to Be Unveiled This Week, Reports Say Canon EOS – The History of Canon’s Digital SLR Cameras Fujifilm Unveils the X-T3 with a 26MP X-Trans Sensor and 4K/60p Video Panasonic Lumix DMC-GH4 4K DSLR Camera Unboxing The Battle is Over: My Micro 4/3 Camera Outsold my Full-Frame DSLR A wedding photographers guide to choosing the right lenses. How to adjust Shutter, Aperture & ISO on a Canon EOS DSLR camera. Best iPhone Photo Editing Apps (2018) The best 4K camera to date? Sony A7S II Review Sony Alpha Tutorial – Learn ‘The Rule of Thirds’ Beginner Tips for Film Photographers How to photograph a car: Best practices | lynda.com tutorial How To Fix Canon DSLR Errors NOW! Sunset Photography Tutorial – Beautiful Fields in France! How to Take Pictures in Black Light : Photography Techniques 5 really cool photo editing and retouching apps for Android and iOS 13 Comments Excellent video Tim! Great info and so well done. Beautiful images as usual… Reply Great video Tim. It's not about the gear, its about the user. We make the images, not a piece of metal, plastic and glass. Really good production, an enjoyable watch. Reply Hilarious but very informative. Next time tell Mali to use the 2 second timer. Keep up the good work Tim. Reply Grease information and fun video!! Reply Enjoyed this one mate. Your passion for the subject and professional delivery is stellar. Reply Great and entertaining vlog tim great tips and great images but i must admit i prefer my DSLR Reply Yeah for more videos on mobile photography. Also, Moment Lens are very good to use. But moving your feet usually works better. Iām looking forward to the upcoming videos. Reply Very interesting video. I should practice more phone photography. I was pretty surprised at some of the shots you got with yours. I wouldn't have expected that. It appeared one of the apps gave you an exposure delay mode. Can you tell me which one or is that native to your phone? I always enjoy your videos Tim. Reply Great episode Tim. I use my mobile phone also as a tool for composition but find many times the image comes out really well – as you mention at the end it has not got the detail required sometimes that a dslr gives you but if all you need is something to record the occasion with it does the trick – wish my dslr had the same dynamic range as my mobile at times š Reply My phone is a bit 'Meh' even with the FV5 app. One discovery I did find on the phone though was that I could actually get and make phone calls! Who'd have known? š Reply Nice one Tim I have always been of the opinion that if you know how to compose and capture an image you can use anything.We all know that if you want to print something to exhibition standard you need the best quality equipment but if you want something for on the computer or for a memory a phone works just fine. Back in February while driving by a Church in Boston Spa the lighting looked lovey but I had no camera gear with me ! However I did not want to miss it so I stopped and captured it on my phone and I was pleased with the results. If I had not stopped and tried I would never have captured the memory of what I had seen:D So thanks for posting this Tim and I think you got some nice waterfall images š the filters looked interesting Thanks again:D Teddy Reply Nice! Got the Huawei P 20 Pro myself and the images are just stunning. Incredible that u can do long exposures without a filter. š Great vid, Tim! Have a great week š Reply Nicely presented Tim.Phones n Drones matey.Liking the look of them Filters very useful indeed. Reply Add Comment Cancel reply Comment: Name * Email * Website Currently you have JavaScript disabled. In order to post comments, please make sure JavaScript and Cookies are enabled, and reload the page. Click here for instructions on how to enable JavaScript in your browser.
Great video Tim. It's not about the gear, its about the user. We make the images, not a piece of metal, plastic and glass. Really good production, an enjoyable watch. Reply
Hilarious but very informative. Next time tell Mali to use the 2 second timer. Keep up the good work Tim. Reply
Yeah for more videos on mobile photography. Also, Moment Lens are very good to use. But moving your feet usually works better. Iām looking forward to the upcoming videos. Reply
Very interesting video. I should practice more phone photography. I was pretty surprised at some of the shots you got with yours. I wouldn't have expected that. It appeared one of the apps gave you an exposure delay mode. Can you tell me which one or is that native to your phone? I always enjoy your videos Tim. Reply
Great episode Tim. I use my mobile phone also as a tool for composition but find many times the image comes out really well – as you mention at the end it has not got the detail required sometimes that a dslr gives you but if all you need is something to record the occasion with it does the trick – wish my dslr had the same dynamic range as my mobile at times š Reply
My phone is a bit 'Meh' even with the FV5 app. One discovery I did find on the phone though was that I could actually get and make phone calls! Who'd have known? š Reply
Nice one Tim I have always been of the opinion that if you know how to compose and capture an image you can use anything.We all know that if you want to print something to exhibition standard you need the best quality equipment but if you want something for on the computer or for a memory a phone works just fine. Back in February while driving by a Church in Boston Spa the lighting looked lovey but I had no camera gear with me ! However I did not want to miss it so I stopped and captured it on my phone and I was pleased with the results. If I had not stopped and tried I would never have captured the memory of what I had seen:D So thanks for posting this Tim and I think you got some nice waterfall images š the filters looked interesting Thanks again:D Teddy Reply
Nice! Got the Huawei P 20 Pro myself and the images are just stunning. Incredible that u can do long exposures without a filter. š Great vid, Tim! Have a great week š Reply