![]() I was also really curious about the new Focus mode and how it might be useful as a photographer. First, the new Photos app and the ability to view/adjust metadata, photo location data, and more. When iOS 15 was announced and featured this year at WWDC, there were a few things that caught my eye as a photographer. It doesn’t feel like a one-size-fits-all preset has been applied, but instead it feels like Anderson slightly pops from the background-his skin tones remain accurate and the background has a pleasant but not overpowering warmth to it. Take a look at this image of Anderson (our awesome guide) below and notice the sense of depth. I customized my own Photographic Style to be -30 Tone and +15 Warmth to more closely match my preferences. ![]() I generally find iPhone images slightly brighter and slightly cooler than my preference, so I love the idea of being able to customize how the iPhone processes photos at the image pipeline level versus correcting individual HEIC files later. This means there’s a lot more depth instead of the flat nature of a preset. Photographic Styles are different because they are aware of the subject and apply different settings to different objects in the scene. The tone and color balance is applied universally across the whole image and it feels artificial, flat, and unimaginative. One of the main reasons I’ve always steered away from presets is their lack of depth. I grew up using Photoshop and come from a background of manually perfecting each pixel in my pictures-basically the opposite of preset culture, which is to choose a “look” and then apply it to the entire image (and sometimes to entire batches of images).
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