Your Quick Guide to 
Smartphone Cameras

Most phones today have three or four cameras, but not all are the same, or even as useful as you might think

Your primary camera is used most often so it should have a high-quality sensor, low aperture, stabilisation, and good resolution

Primary camera

The lower the value, the brighter and sharper your low-light shots will be. f/1.8 is better than f/2.2.

Aperture

Check for optical or at least electronic stabilisation which will help reduce jerkiness in video

Stabilisation

You can fit more people or objects in each shot. This is good for landscapes but quality will suffer and watch out for distortion at the edges

Wide-angle camera

Used to get extreme close-ups of small objects. The resolution is very low, often resulting in grainy, dull, shots, especially in low light.

Macro camera

Also called a "portrait sensor", you can't shoot photos with this camera but it captures information used to blur backgrounds behind subjects

Depth sensor

You'll have to stand still when taking photos but Night Mode (or Nightscape) can capture much brighter shots with more detail, and reduce blurring.

Night Mode

You can get cool video effects with slow-motion up to 960fps, but usually at low resolutions.

Slow-mo and Hyperlapse

Some phones aimed at selfie lovers have a better camera on the front than the rear. Some also have a front wide-angle or depth sensor

Front cameras

Also called AI stickers, you can make these characters mimic your own facial expressions to make messaging more fun.

Animoji

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