If you'd asked us a few months ago to pick one smartphone, which had the absolute best cameras in the iPhone Kevin Pro would have been an easy recommendation. You've already seen some great things the cameras of the recently launched galaxy s, 20 plus, are capable of in a full review, but does this phone capture better images and video than the iPhone 11 Pro it's time to find out now before we go ahead, don't forget to subscribe to our Channel and also hit that Bell icon, so you're the first to know whenever we have a new video first, let's take a look at the rear camera specs of the galaxy s 20 plus now, let's take a look at the rear camera specs of the iPhone 11 Pro now, with this out of the way, it's time to head to the tests to see which phone does a better job. In our first test, we have a landscape shot of a nearby building. Now both smartphones capture, excellent details of the building and the trees in the foreground. However, we do prefer the shot taken with the iPhone 11 Pro, simply because the exposure is more balanced and colors are more natural, a shot from the galaxy s 20 plus is brighter, but the textures on the building surfaces blown out, and the sky is a little unnaturally blue. It looks striking no doubt, but it's not the most accurate in a second shot.
We got nearly identical. Looking images from both phones' exposure was once again well-balanced, and there was plenty of details and objects both near and far. Samsung does bump up the colors very slightly, and the shadows are also lifted, which makes for a more vivid result compared to what the 11pro delivers. However, as a result, the blacks are crushed a little drizzling, slightly less detail than what the iPhone is capable of. In low-light, the Samsung Galaxy S, 20 plus, was unable to reproduce very good colors, however, switch into night mode, improve things dramatically, colors were notice, will be better, and he could see a lot more detail in objects in the shadows.
However, textures on smaller objects such as the leaves looked a bit worse, the iPhone 11 Pro automatically activates night mode when it detects low light, and there is our fantastic. Comparing its output with the night mode shot with the galaxy s.20 plus the 11pro managed more realistic colors on the leaves and trees and even finer textures were better defined for landscapes. We'd pick the iPhone 11 Pro as the overall winner switching to much smaller objects and shooting under harsh sunlight. We see that 11 probe balance the exposures very well and not only that it even managed to retain the right shade of red on the flaws and deliver of pleasing depth effect for the background, the galaxy s rain, heedless struggle with exposure of it and then managed to meter the white balance very well. As a result, the flash took on an orange hue from the sunlight which wasn't accurate.
It did deliver a slightly stronger depth effect, though compared to the Levant row. A second subject will also photograph at around the same time of day, but under the cover of trees. So the light was less harsh. The iPhone 11 through once again produce a more neutral color tone and a more accurate rendition of the pink shade of the flowers. If you look closer, it even managed slightly better textures than the galaxy s, 20, plus saps X photo wasn't far behind with a slightly warmer color tone.
A low-light is where the galaxy s 20, plus earns back some points in a first shot of some more flaws. Both phones delivered equally well exposed and detailed images. However, with the beta crop, we can see that the galaxy s 20 plus produced better details, even in a second shot. It appeared as though the eleventh row has the better image at first glance, since a lot of the elements were in focus, however, the S ironic plus did sneak past the iPhone with a slightly softer and more realistic, looking shot for close-ups. It's a tie between both as we found 11th row to be more consistent during the day, while the galaxy s 20 plus offered better details in low-light.
Now, both phones, let you simulate the effect of having a large aperture lens of the DSLR on the iPhone. It's called portrait mode, while Samsung calls at live focus when shooting people, it's a close call between the iPhone, 11 Pro and the galaxy s 20, plus both phones produce excellent details and skin tones. However, upon closer inspection, we found that it's the galaxy s 20 plus that gave us the better picture of the tube when zoomed in you will notice that the details on our subjects face were better, as skin tones also looked a bit more actually using the telephoto cameras on objects. Once again, both phones captured striking photos with very good edge detection. It's a little hard to pick a show winner here.
So we call this one: a tie in low-light the iPhone Kevin from messed up the short pretty badly by not being able to blow out the right objects. Samsung did a commendable job. He imagined correctly blurred out even the small gaps between the leaves of the flowers overall we'd give this round to the galaxy s 20 plus. First, let's look at the front camera specs to the galaxy s4 plus. Now, let's take a look at the selfie camera specs for the iPhone 11 row.
In a first outdoor test during the day, the iPhone Kevin throws straight up, has the better image skin tones are spot-on, and the overall tone looks more pleasing. Samsung manages good details too, but the skin tones look a bit pale and colors are a bit muted. Both phones do a good job of dropping on the background properly, but once again we prefer the skin tones of the Kevin probe to the galaxy s 20, plus in lone eye. The iPhone manages moon natural skin tones for details, one grade and there were some visible noise. In the background objects.
The galaxy s, 20 plus captured a cleaner image, but dear ears were once again strictly average. Now Samsung does have a secret weapon, though, which is night mode for the selfie camera you'll have to stay still for a bit longer, but the weight is totally worth it as details and colors are much better. Once again, the results are split between the two. We do prefer the iPhone 11 true for daytime selfies, but night moon makes a world of a difference when taking selfies with the Galaxy S 20 plus in a first. As is the 11pro which manages slightly better exposure on the building in front of us compared to the s 20 plus in a second test, it's another close call between the two phones, but just like the same shot.
We took with the phone's primary cameras. The Galaxy S 20 plus tends to lift the shadows a bit more for a more dramatic look at night. The iPhone 11 throws wide-angle camera isn't of much use unless you have ample light around night mode does not work with the wide-angle camera on the Levant pro. On the other hand, even in the standard mode, the s 20 plus produced a slightly brighter image than the iPhone, and things got dramatically better with night mode all. Overall, we would pick the wide-angle camera of the galaxy s, 20 plus as the winner for its competent daylight performance and superior low-light capability.
Now for the fun part of the zoom test, we've already tested the zoom capabilities of the galaxy s, 20 plus in our full review, and the short verdict is that it's pretty impressive. The Apple boasts of a 2 X optical zoom camera, while Samsung claims to deliver a 3x hybrid optical zoom. We begin with a 2 X optical zoom shot now in this level, both sensors can deliver excellent detail and colors and exposures are a handle very well. The iPhone 11 Pro adds a slightly warm tinge to the photos, but other than this both are equally good. Let's now jump to the 10x magnification, which is the highest zone possible on the iPhone 11th row, with ample natural light, the iPhone managed to produce decent details.
Although texture quality was average and some edges of the buildings had noticed the distortion and looking at the photo taken with the s20 plus, we see a massive difference in quality details and textures and objects are a lot clearer. There's no edge distortion and colors are also a lot more vivid now with the s 20 plus you can zoom in further to 20x and also up to 30x, but at these levels smaller objects can't exactly recognizable and overall reading rates, quite a bit to a point where you won't really want to share these shots with anyone. It's cool that you can do this, but it might not be too useful. Now we did one more daytime test and this time of a much closer subject, focus wasn't very sharp on the iPhone 11 Pro shot, whereas the galaxy s 20 plus apply a bit of sharpening I, mean the flowers stand out and then exhumed iPhone 11 Pro captured a flat looking image with relatively weak texture details, the s 20 plus, on the other hand, captured an amazing shot with plenty of details, rich colors and no grain. You can really see Samson's AI algorithms at work here as a photo actually look better than the short taking even at 3x.
So, if you're shooting in very low light, then both these phones will zoom in digitally using the primary camera rather than the optical zoom cameras in order to preserve quality and to exhume the iPhone 11 Pro still does a better job with colors. Detail annoys night mode works here too, since the primary camera is in use, Samsung's night mode is an if compared to shooting in the standard mode, but the colors and details aren't as good as what 11pro manages now a 10x zoom, the iPhone 11 no surprises with decent details. Even though the picture quality was below average, the galaxy s 20 plus, on the other hand, did a pretty poor job of resolving any detail, as its output was heavily Denise, flattening out the textures of most objects. However, with night mode active, it was a completely different story. Details and textures were massively improved, making the photo actually usable when it comes to zoom the galaxy s.20 plus, is the clear leader, pure iPhones, have long been the gold standard when it came to smartphone videography, but last year we found that the Galaxy Note 10 ?, with the galaxy s 20, plus that gap has narrowed even more when recording 4k videos under good light. Footage from both phones was very similar, displaying very good details and colors.
The iPhone 11 Pro records slightly louder audio, but focusing was equally quick and on point with both phones, even when we panned around stabilization- and this resolution was also handled beautifully and both the s 20 plus and the Levant roll. Let you switch between the wide-angle and telephoto sensors, while recording the galaxy s4 class has a neat party trick, which is shooting 8k video. This is impressive, but we are not quite convinced that it's entirely useful at least right now. The frame rate is still limited to 24 fps at this resolution, and the frame is also heavily cropped. Now both phones can shoot slow-motion video at up to 240 FPS.
The Galaxy S ironic plus, can also shoot at 9 60fps, but for a very limited time the quality is decent. At 240 FPS on both phones but not so much a 960 fps. The selfie cameras should crisp 4k footage ?, making these phones great for vlogging audio quality is very good. Even if you don't use an external microphone and a video is stabilized well, which is a bonus in low-light the galaxy s.20 plus surprised us as it managed cleaner footage and better colors. We noticed some mild distortion when moving about, but not too much footage taken with iPhone 11pro was good, but a bit grainy and colors weren't as vivid the wide-angle.
Cameras of both phones shoot much darker and clean your footage, but even here the s20 plus was a smudge. Better Samsung has done well this time and overall considering the option of 8k and all the other video modes, we feel the galaxy s.20 plus is the better option for video. It's unsurprising that the iPhone 11 Pro has aged well and can still hold its own against Android flagships of only 20/20, but we're happy to see that it finally has some stiff competition. When it comes to cameras, the galaxy s, 20 plus easily goes toe-to-toe with it and in many cases, performs even better the fact that Samsung's phone is a lot more affordable. ? is the cherry on top.
Of course, it is an entirely perfect. Photos did have some issues with white balance and exposure, especially when shooting under harsh light and skin tones and selfies were generally on the paler side. However, when it comes to zoom, the galaxy astronomers absolutely destroys the iPhone 11th row, even in areas such as video, where Samsung has long faltered is now on par with the iPhone thanks for watching and for all things, tech log on a gadget, 360 com.
Source : Gadgets 360