Sentences with phrase «amount of blur»

From there, you can save a new image with a different amount of blur in it.
To determine which of these two theories was correct, he and his colleagues used a new technique that presented different amounts of blur to various regions of the eye.
As far as the 100 percent crop quality goes, the S8 + offers surprising performance once again, providing the perfect amount of blur, correct colors, and high detail quality.
Low - light photos benefit from Sony's RGBW sensor, pulling in more light than we expected with its f / 2.0 aperture, but the camera seems to struggle to find something to focus on, and unless you keep a very steady hand, shots still tend to show a fair amount of blur.
A f / 2.2 smartphone camera actually only provides a depth of field equivalent to a f / 13 or f / 14 aperture on a full frame camera, which only produces a small amount of blur.
What's unique in Samsung's implementation is how you can adjust the amount of blur, before and after you take the photo.
Some minor segmentation artifacts can be visible around the edges of the subject, but subject / background isolation is generally very nice, the amount of blur makes for a natural look, and the blur transition is pleasant.
You can take selfies and adjust the amount of blur in the background, before and after taking the image — this feature is called Live Focus and we've seen it before on the rear dual camera of the Galaxy Note 8.
My favorite feature carried over from previous Huawei devices is the wide aperture mode, which lets you take a shot and customize the aperture (and therefore the amount of blur)-- before or after taking the picture — anywhere from f / 0.95 to f / 16.
The results are still great in regular photos, but I miss having a slider to adjust the amount of blur that's applied to a photo's background when Live Focus is enabled.
While there is no Dual OIS as seen on the Galaxy Note 8, the Galaxy J7 + at least offers Live Focus to control the amount of blur.
You can adjust the amount of blur, both before and after you take the photo.
Even after the image is taken, Live Focus allows you to continue to tweak the amount of blur in the photo.
There are nice little touches like the ability to change the amount of blur on a wallpaper and the fact that ASUS bundles all their apps into one folder is kinda nice.
In theory, being able to adjust the amount of blur in less - than - stellar conditions could be a handy way to make up for a poorly rendered shot.
You can adjust the amount of blur, also referred to as bokeh, surrounding the subject before or after pressing the shutter button.
The Note 8 lets you adjust the amount of blur both before and after you take the shot.
Here you can take selfies and adjust the amount of blur in the background, both before and after taking the picture.
I just wish there were a way to tone adjust the amount of blur; it can sometimes be too much.
It uses both the camera lenses on the Galaxy S9 Plus to achieve this effect, and there is an on - screen slider to adjust the amount of blur it adds.
First off, the Samsung Galaxy S9 + gives the option to adjust the amount of blur after the shot, whereas you can only toggle it on or off on the smaller S9.
However, unlike the iPhone, Samsung gives you tools to adjust the amount of blur either before shooting or after the image is processed.
At the bottom of the screen, you'll see a handy slider that allows you to adjust the amount of blur the camera adds to your picture.
One thing the Note 8 has that I wish the iPhone X and Pixel 2 XL had is the ability to adjust the amount of blur, both while you're composing the shot and after you've taken it.
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