I’ll let Lightroom product manager Tom Hogarty explain: Unlike auto-bracketing with your DSLR, Lightroom’s bright and dark exposures are intelligently calculated based on the scene brightness. In HDR mode, Lightroom captures three shots, bright, normal, and dark, and exposure-merges them into one. The Camera module of Lightroom Mobile now has three modes: Automatic, Professional (which offers manual exposure controls), and High Dynamic Range. But today Adobe has updated Lightroom Mobile (2.6 for iOS, 2.3 for Android) with a new feature: High Dynamic Range (HDR) capture. Clipped highlights and/or noisy shadows are still the giveaways. Raw capture, combined with Lightroom’s editing controls (including local adjustments), does deliver on the initial promise of “Lightroom on your camera” that I wrote about here.īut as sharp and portable as the iPhone camera is, and as powerful as Lightroom’s editing controls are, telephone photos still struggle with dynamic range. Part of this inspiration comes from the ability to shoot raw with Lightroom Mobile. Posting iPhone photos to Instagram is hardly unusual, but what’s new is that I’m once again inspired by the creative possibilities of my little telephone camera. If you look back through my recent Instagram posts, you may notice something unusual (for me): the majority of photos I’ve posted lately are not from my big, full-frame cameras (currently: 5D Mark III, Sony a7S II, and Sony RX1R II), but rather from my iPhone 7 Plus.
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