Hey guys come here from pocket-lint and with the iPhone 11 Pro and iPhone 11 Apple has finally jumped on board the nighttime photography wagon, and we couldn't be happier to finally get great low-light shooting on an iPhone so to test it out. We sent Stuart out with the iPhone and a couple of other phones already praised for their night mode capabilities. Those, of course, are the Huawei P 50 Pro, and the Google picks on three. Now all work on a similar principle and as you'd expect apples is a largely automatic thing, depending on the amount of light available and how steady you're holding it is'll change the amount of exposure time hit the shutter button, and it'll do the rest itself. So, instead of telling you which camera I think produced the best shots, we're going to do a sort of blind test: I'm going to label, the phone's, a B and C, and then show you a regular automatic mode shot and then a night mode shot for each camera, and you can see the differences between them and let me know which one you think produce the best shots now. Of course, I will reveal all at the end.
I'll tell you which phone is which and also share with you a few things that we noticed as a team with the photography. So here goes so there you have it three phones and each of them with different results, and now it's time for me to tell you which one is a B and C. Now those of you with eagle eyes will maybe have already noticed that a way the Huawei P 30 Pro B was the iPhone 11 Pro, Max and C was the Google Pixel three. Each phone, of course has its benefits. As we've already mentioned, one of the things we noticed about the Hawaii 30 Pro and something that came about when we were reviewing the phone a few months ago was just how good it was in automatic mode.
It can draw in a lot of light without switching to night mode, but when you do switch to night mode, you get a little more detail and more contrast to make a better overall image. The pixel 3 was somewhat the opposite in automatic mode. In low-light, it was grainy and hard to see what was actually in the image at times, but in night mode it brings in a lot of light, sometimes making it look a bit like daylight, so where we noticed the biggest difference probably was the shot of Stuart in the pub holding his beer Huawei's. Had this almost sepia look to it, making him look quite yellow, but then the details were good, and the background has this nice soft blur to it. Depicts all three, on the other hand, make it look almost like daylight.
It was bright, it was sharp, and the skin tones were pretty natural, but the lighting on the bottles. In the background, looked quite blue and cool color wise, the iPhone was okay. Although the skin tones were a little blush and dark, but the color overall was a little closer to what it looked like to the eye, regardless of which of these phones, you think, is the better camera for night shots. All of these shots are a testament to the fact that how far smartphone cameras have come over the last few years, the fact that we can shoot these shots with tiny little sensors on the back of our phone, it's quite frankly, magical whether you go for the iPhone, the Huawei or the pixel anyway. Let me know what your thoughts are in the comments, if you haven't already said, which you thought was the best, please do comment below I think come I'll see you again soon.
Source : Pocket-lint