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Mac macro
Mac macro











mac macro
  1. #MAC MACRO FULL#
  2. #MAC MACRO PRO#
  3. #MAC MACRO SOFTWARE#

Here’s another macro shot I took, again relying on very fine focus control:

#MAC MACRO PRO#

For example, I once used a high-end macro lens on a pro DLSR to shoot a series of photos I called London Eyes. Photographers aren’t going to be putting down their DSLRs and proper macro lenses in favor of this.

#MAC MACRO FULL#

If you start pixel peeping, examining images at full resolution on a large monitor, then the limitations start becoming obvious, and the image gets muddy. What it has managed to do is get an existing lens to focus at extremely close distances so that you can take macro-like photos. Let’s start with the obvious: Apple hasn’t managed to fit a real macro lens into an iPhone. Conclusions on iPhone 13 macro photography capabilities I did try to get a clean one, but gave up after 10 minutes with a supposedly lint-free cloth. For example, this looked like it could do with a wipe-down with a cloth, but it doesn’t look terrible, right? Gadget photography… not so much! Every microscopic spec of dust looks like a baseball, and even with brand-new kit, you’d need way more patience than I have to clean it. Or sharing a hobbyist’s work in progress… I could definitely see craftspeople finding it useful, whether it’s showing off the quality of professional work… You can easily get some interesting abstract shots from things as ordinary as a wool sweater, an office chair, and flowers. Tap-to-focus is pretty much impossible when you’re so close, and the tap itself will shift the framing.īut provided you are happy with lacking fine control, the results are pretty impressive. On the iPhone, the good news is that you can take macro shots handheld, but the bad news is that you don’t really get too much control over what’s in focus. On a DSLR, macro photography usually requires the camera on a tripod, as you’d be manually focusing, and the depth of field is wafer thin.

#MAC MACRO SOFTWARE#

Apple says it will fix this with a software update. You start carefully framing, creeping closer, then, bam, you’re looking at an out-of-focus shot of something outside your frame. When it does so, it switches cameras – which is, as early reviewers said, intensely annoying. I understand Apple’s decision to have macro photography (a) be discoverable and (b) just work, but it snaps out of macro mode as readily as it snaps in. That sounds like the perfect user interface, but it’s really not. The way macro photography works on the iPhone 13 is you just get closer to your subject until it switches to macro mode. When it comes to macro photography, that would be more like 99.9% cleaning… I half joke that photographing gadgets is 5% photography, 5% editing, and 90% cleaning.

mac macro mac macro

Early reviews seem to indicate that there is essentially no limit to how close you can get to the thing you’re photographing, so I put this to the test. One of the new features of the iPhone 13 Pro/Pro Max is its macro photography capabilities.













Mac macro