MacLife

Shoot portraits in low light

to experience shorter days and long winter evenings, there are more opportunities for capturing stunning low–light portraits. City lights can add an extra dimension of color and atmosphere, however, whether you’re shooting indoors or out, low light can prove problematic for even the most accomplished photographer. By default, your iPhone’s Camera app works automatically to try and capture detail in low light. It will choose a slower shutter speed to let in more light and get a better exposure

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from MacLife

MacLife4 min read
Help! How Do I Back Up My Mac?
DO YOU HAVE too many backups, or not enough? Can you easily recover from the backups you do have? Here we talk you through how you can create and restore from Time Machine backups, and also how to clone your internal and external drives using third–p
MacLife1 min read
Paying The Piper
Separate to the complaints over integrations, platforms and payment methods — but still crucially important as these platforms develop — is the amount Spotify and Apple Music actually pay the people that make the music. Spotify is clear: it pays righ
MacLife3 min read
Ask
THERE’S MORE TO Live Text than meets the eye. Although normally seen at work in its quick mode interactively recognizing snippets of text in our photos, it can also work more slowly and accurately. That’s been built into a new generation of third–par

Related Books & Audiobooks