In addition, you can adjust
the background blur after the fact while also even viewing the full view of the captured image when dual focus is enabled.
The device also the Live Focus feature to adjust
the background blur after capturing the image.
Not exact matches
The much - sought -
after portrait mode will let you snap a shot, and the phone will process the image and add the
background blur for you.
The feature lets you
blur the
background and highlight the foreground before or
after taking the shot.
The Note 8 has the ability to adjust the intensity of the
background blur before and
after the shot, and Apple has added studio lighting effects to iPhone X.
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.
You can then adjust how much you want the
background blurred - out
after the fact.
Samsung also lets users
blur the
background further
after taking the picture.
Shooting in this mode will allow for images to be refocused
after the fact, along with the level of
blur to be adjusted, and the camera does a really great job of separating objects in the foreground from the
background.
Portrait Mode stil artfully
blurs out the
background with the so - called bokeh effect — and it looks a little more natural now — while a new Portrait Lighting feature (in beta) lets you adjust the lighting of your shots before and
after you shoot with several effects.
With the help of the Live Focus feature, users of the two phones will also be able to adjust the
background blur before and
after taking shots.
What's more, the dual lenses would allow the S9 + to deliver Live Focus, which means you could take portrait photos and
blur the
background both while shooting and
after the shot is taken.
Thanks to the fact that you have two cameras you can
blur out
backgrounds and keep yourself - and anyone else - in the foreground sharp — and as the camera packs Huawei's time - honoured Aperture mode, the
background defocus can be adjusted
after you take a shot, giving you maximum control over the degree of
blur.
It has also changed the software so that you can adjust the bokeh effect (
blurred background) before and
after you snap the photo.
Honor 9i also supports the feature as seen in Honor 8 where the image
background can be
blurred even
after clicking the image.
Plus, Honor 9i also supports the feature where the image
background can be
blurred even
after clicking the image.
While many sites are making noise about the Selective Focus feature — the ability to
blur out the
background or seemingly refocus the photo
after the fact — the feature is simplistic and not always effective.
Although a photographer can apply a
background blur effect
after the initial image has been taken, since it's not applied automatically as part of the smartphone's default photography features, we do not include it in our analysis.
On the rear its dual lenses allow for optical zoom as well as digital zoom, as well as live focus which enables you to do all kinds of effects including
blurring the
background - even
after you've taken the shot.
The Live Focus feature allows you to capture an image and adjust the
background blur both, at the point of capture, and
after you've taken the picture.
Unlike the iPhone, the Note 8 lets you adjust the level of
blur on the
background both before and
after taking shot.
Live focus feature will also be available with the camera, which lets you change the
background blur on images
after capturing.
The twin lenses support features like adding a
background blur (before and
after you take a shot) or simultaneously snapping a close - up shot and a wide - angle one of the same scene.