Photography isn’t just about the latest cameras or the newest lighting gear (even though we obviously love that stuff). It’s about capturing a moment. And sometimes all you need to capture a stunning image is an iPhone, as evidenced by the 2013 IPPA Winners or local mobile artists Adam Elkins and Amy Liebrand. Partially thanks to publications like National Geographic offering iPhone photo tips and the New Yorker making their Instagram feed an integral aspect of their Photo Booth blog, iPhone photography has emerged as a legitimate craft, and traditional photographers who poo-poo iPhone photographers increasingly seem out of touch with current trends. Listen up: iPhones aren’t just for selfies anymore.
Of course there are limitations to iPhone photography. For one, you can’t effectively sync an iPhone to an LP180, so that’s a huge drawback. I also find that portraits are better taken with a DSLR than an iPhone. You have much less control, so for professional and semi-professional portrait and commercial work, you’re still going to want to use a DSLR. Lens selection is a huge plus in the DSLR column, not to mention low-light capabilities for the iPhone truly suck. And then there’s the matter of achieving high-quality prints, which is really what photography is all about in the end.
But there are obvious advantages that the iPhone has over the DSLR, namely that if you have one, it’s always going to be with you. And many of the same principles in regards to what makes a good photograph still apply (perhaps even more so, given the iPhone’s technical limitations).
So what are some good photo apps? Let’s take a look at some of the most popular camera apps.
The reigning social photo app champ, Instagram is many iPhone photographers’ first introduction to what their phones are capable of, image-wise. It doubles as a photo app and a social app, letting you instantaneously share the shots you take.
This means Instagram is the most “connected” photo app, but it also means that your feed can pretty soon be full of people’s dinners and terribly lit drunken party shots.
Instagram has some terrible filters, but it also has great filters, as long as your shot is properly lit. Their “miniaturization” filter is also quite useful, though I use it more as a substitute for shallow depth of field than anything else. While their “retro” filters look mostly like someone slathered your image in a monotone blue or yellow, their more subtle filters can often enhance the photo. Unfortunately, with Instagram, you can’t do a whole lot besides add a filter and use the miniaturization effect to draw focus to a certain aspect of your image. Their photo-editing capabilities are pretty limited, so while you can share your images instantly, they might not be the best you can get.
However, when one image fails to upload, you can often save that image to your camera roll, bring it back into Instagram, and add another filter. Some of my personal favorite images have been made this way.
It also has a really, really cool 15-second video feature.
Hipstamatic
Hipstamatic was in the faux-retro game several months before Instagram, and sort of launched the toy-camera/mock-light-leak craze.
Camera+
Camera+ is a beefy version of your normal iPhone camera. It’s a general photo-taking app that packs in some cool features, like the ability to meter and focus at separate spots on your screen.
VSCO Cam
Alternatively, VSCO Cam is like Camera+ with less features but a lower price tag. It’s probably the camera app I use most, as I find the details it captures are crisper, the lighting always looks better, and it gives me just enough options for post-processing without overwhelming me.
inseparable here, but I find that the app does a better job at both than most others like it, without cluttering the screen. [Editor’s note: Reader Jared let us know in the comments that you can actually separate focus and metering by tapping the screen with two fingers, which is a super useful feature.]
Afterlight
I realize we’ve sort of gotten away from the whole “instant gratification” aspect of iPhone photography, as some of these apps are way more involved than just tapping your screen and capturing an image. Enter Afterlight, a genuinely amazing 99-cent photo-editing app for your iPhone. The amount of options (and degrees of options) that you have to create your images is stunning, and the effects are much more subtle in Afterlight than they are in the actual camera apps. You can even fake that great light-leak look and change how prominent that effect appears in your image.
Check out a plain old image before running it through Afterlight . . .
So what camera app do you use? Take this poll, or let us know in the comments!
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