How To Take A Moon Photo With Iphone 11
Is Apple going to come out with a fix to remove the blue dots when taking night time photos.
How to take a moon photo with iphone 11. Before going outside to take a photo of the moon hold your iPhone up to something bright. The photo is calculated and it may take a while before the photo becomes visible. To get a nice image of the moon you need to trick the iPhone into setting its exposure and ISO for the moon.
It never seems to look like what you see with your eye. They can be pretty bad. To get maximum magnification I aligned and focused the iPhone camera lens to one side of the 8X binocular and then used the digital zoom.
Touch the screen using two fingers and use the spread gesture to zoom in or the pinch gesture to. You can use Night mode on. Moon through iPhone behind a pair of binoculars This scene is low-resolution by design.
Turn on your camera app. My sister has a Samsung it takes much better pictures. So no you cant just point your iPhone 11 into complete and total darkness to take a photo of something even you cant see.
I used the light in my kitchen. An iPhone 7 was used to take this photograph of the Moon through a 4-inch telescope. To do this you will need a light source like a torch or even your indoor room lights and an app that allows you to lock the exposure.
Tap the moon and swipe with your finger on the screen to the left to make the photo darker with the exposure compensation and take the picture. I spent a lot of money for my iPhone 11 and I dont think it should be doing this. In order for Night mode to work there needs to be at least some light source.