![]() This review is not about the fancy schmancy modes that the standard app offers, you’ll find plenty of info in other places if you want to know the ins and outs of the portrait mode or that cool photo lighting mode, suffice to say I reckon they are pretty cool. But Wendy, being a lovely lady and terrific wife, agreed to let me have a little free time with her new 8 Plus baby. ![]() Frankly dragging any new Apple device from Wendys’ hot hands when she’s in the first blush of Apple love is harder than getting our Border Collie to give up a bone. First off, consider this a preliminary test: it’s my wife’s iPhone and it only arrived Friday morning, so my time with it was a very limited, basically an hour or so on Sunday afternoon. Nothing is clipped either.Īnd so here we are just a few days after the iPhone 8 release with a peek beneath the DNG hood. Anyway it shows how the deep shadows (under the bridge) hold up pretty well. Sometimes test shots work out nice in themselves and quite like this one, perhaps it is the layered effect. For comparison the shot below is one of the test images I took with the iPad Pro converted to monochrome, the overall quality is rather nice. Anyhow, I’d have been happy if the iPhone 8 Plus DNG files were as good as the iPad Pro since it seems they’re actually a bit better I’m pretty chuffed. As far as I can tell the modules on the iPad Pro and iPhone 8 plus are pretty similar, save for the lack of stabilization on the iPad, but like all things Apple it can be quite difficult to get any definitive answers on what’s going on under the hood.
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