07-26-2017 08:02 AM
07-26-2017 08:21 AM
SolutionHi @Ranvijay if you are using a smartphone, please, use light; you need a lot of light for better photography.
So, find the correct place where shoot the photograph; i.e. if you are shooting a building, stay as far as you can to include the entire building in the frame, use the correct orientation, portrait or landscape, and move yourself to have the building walls more straight than they could be.
Try to avoid crowd, cars, and other distractions.
And place yourself with the light on your back, because smartphone cameras are not so good with frontlight.
07-26-2017 08:21 AM
SolutionHi @Ranvijay if you are using a smartphone, please, use light; you need a lot of light for better photography.
So, find the correct place where shoot the photograph; i.e. if you are shooting a building, stay as far as you can to include the entire building in the frame, use the correct orientation, portrait or landscape, and move yourself to have the building walls more straight than they could be.
Try to avoid crowd, cars, and other distractions.
And place yourself with the light on your back, because smartphone cameras are not so good with frontlight.
07-26-2017 09:13 AM
Very helpful reply for me
07-26-2017 09:17 AM
Any other solution in low lighting
07-26-2017 09:20 AM
@Ranvijay wrote:
Any other solution in low lighting
Smartphone photography in low lighting isn't easy.
You could buy a little tripod and an adapter to hold steady the smartphone.
Then you can experiment with light painting, using a led lamp on nearest objects.
07-26-2017 09:23 AM
Something like this:
http://gizmodo.com/a-tiny-flexible-tripod-for-perching-your-smartphone-any-1171859118
And this is a video about light painting:
07-26-2017 09:25 AM
Another trick: use a custom camera software, not the factory one; you have to take control of exposure!
07-26-2017 09:46 AM
Also helpful
07-26-2017 10:09 AM
u can use a still camera on a tripod.
07-26-2017 11:18 AM
Nice video on night photography & light photography.