Not exact matches
With a few swipes of your finger, you can keep the subject of your photo in perfect focus
while blurring the
background.
Notice how the empty beers on that far table and wall hangings in the
background are razor sharp,
while Kendrick and Dunham in the foreground remain a
blur.
One of the most effective methods of using
backgrounds is to light
blur and fade a selected
background while the main point to be made is clearer and brighter.
According to him, some fonts are not attractive for reading and looks
blurred on the screen
while some are looking magnificent on the screen with all
backgrounds.
This will
blur the
background,
while keeping the subject in focus.
While you can see some bloom /
blur effects in the
background, it all feels natural.
For example, in Law of the Jungle (2017), the actors» names — Hattie McDaniel and Bill (Bojangles) Robinson are painted white and large, then wiped by hand, in the foreground,
while the films Law of the Jungle, Midnight Shadow and Blood of Jesus, are in a smaller font in a light gray tone and
blurred to a greater extent so it seems they are floating — as if into obscurity — in the
background.
Even
while some figures are loosely framed within the conventions of portraiture, the artist's richly hued
backgrounds and undulating bodies
blur a clear distinction between figuration and abstraction.
Renowned photographer Miller Mobley used the new iPhone 7 Plus feature, which applies a depth - of - field effect to make the foreground subject sharp
while creating a beautifully
blurred background, to shoot pop superstar Camila Cabello for the February 17 issue of the magazine, on newsstands now.
Used together it captures bokeh - style
blurred background shots (like the iPhone's Portrait Mode),
while the monochrome lens on its own takes great looking black and white photos without a filter.
Our dual camera system uses two sensors to put the focus on the face you're capturing
while blurring the
background for a gentle, yet powerful effect.
The camera application now features a «Portrait Mode» and uses software algorithms to keep the main subject in focus
while blurring out the
background.
On the Galaxy S9 and S9 +, the 8MP front camera can optionally
blur the
background of images
while keeping the foreground in focus in Selfie focus mode, much like the bokeh effect on the Google Pixel 2 and Pixel 2XL.
You can tinker with the focus to
blur the
background,
while keeping sharp focus on subject of your choice, or let the picture remain like it was originally captured.
For me, the highlight of the Zenfone 4 Selfie Pro was the Portrait mode that let me take pictures with subject in sharp focus
while blurring the
background.
Later this year Apple will release an update to iOS 10 that will make it possible for the iPhone 7 Plus to see Live Previews with bokeh, or
blurred backgrounds,
while taking portrait photos, Schiller said.
You can also create depth - effects, by focusing on the subject
while blurring out the
background.
It seems better at
blurring out the
background while keeping your subject sharp, though some photographers may not appreciate the harsher details.
The «Bokeh» mode allows users to take pictures with the object in sharp focus
while the
background is
blurred.
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.
While photos look great much of the time, the software can mess up the
blur affect at times when colors blend in or there is not much separation between the focal subject and
background items.
Both the front and rear camera setups comprise a 13MP primary sensor with phase detection autofocus (PDAF) and a 2MP depth - sensing secondary sensor, and they're capable of producing a bokeh effect that
blurs the
background while sharpening the foreground.
Portrait Mode
blurs backgrounds when taking a picture of a person or object,
while Motion Photos tack 1.5 seconds of video on either end of photos.
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.
The secondary lens enables the same tricks it does in the Note 8, including a Live Focus mode for bringing objects into focus
while blurring the
background.
That allows the S9 + to offer a 2x optical zoom
while also supporting Live Focus images with artistically
blurred backgrounds.
But this time the secondary rear camera is a 20MP sensor (Sony IMX 376K, f / 1.7 aperture, 1.0 µm pixel size) which will allow it to produce depth - of - field effects that
blur image
backgrounds while keeping the foreground in focus.
Other highlights include OnePlus's proprietary Intelligent Pixel Technology, which merges four pixels into one to reduce noise and enhance clarity, and Portrait Mode, which creates a depth - of - field bokeh effect by
blurring the
background while keeping the foreground in focus.
You can move the aperture from f / 0.95 to f / 16, depending on your requirements — the simple rule is that a low aperture value will
blur the
background more,
while a high value will not
blur it as much.
Also new Selective Focus feature allows users to focus on a specific area of an object
while simultaneously
blurring out the
background.
There's a bokeh mode as well, which essentially
blurs the
background while keeping the subject in sharp focus.
Real - time Portrait Mode produces a bokeh effect,
blurring the
background of photos
while keeping the foreground intact.
A portrait mode will
blur out the
background to focus your attention on the clothes
while the Style Check feature gives a second opinion of outfits through a combination of algorithms and Amazon's «team of experienced fashion specialists.»
Though there's no dual camera setup, both the front and rear cameras support Bokeh mode, which lets users click pictures with subject in sharp focus,
while the
background is
blurred.
One of the rear cameras is a color lens
while the other shoots in monochrome; the dual shooters work together to capture images in true black and white without conversion, and there's selective focus to
blur out the
background.
Portrait Lighting on an iPhone 8 PlusYou may recall the Portrait mode feature introduced with the iPhone 7 Plus that let you take sharply focused photos of an object
while adding an artistic
blur to
background details.
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.
They can combine to enable 2x optical zoom and features such as Portrait Mode and Portrait Lighting, which keep the subject crisp and in focus
while blurring the
background or manipulating ambient light.
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.
Even though, the phone does not feature dual cameras on the back, it uses some software work to give you the option to
blur the
background while keeping the foreground subject in focus.
The camera software comes with various features named as Selective Focus (Bokeh) which adds a
blur to
background or foreground of images
while keeping the main subject in clear focus and Selective black and white which allows changing the
background or foreground to black and white with the main subject in full colour.
In the Portrait mode, the object, be it a flower or a dog or a person, is in sharp focus
while the rest of the
background is
blurred, creating a shallow depth of field.
It supports Bokeh mode, which lets users take pictures with the subject in sharp focus
while the
background is
blurred.
Both phones sport optical image stabilization, but the extra lens on the iPhone X grants it some extra tricks, including optical zoom and the ability to focus on the foreground
while blurring the
background to create a bokeh effect.
Portrait mode continues to improve and can bring some stunning results, and
while the front - facing camera isn't TrueDepth - enabled (so you can't do
blurred -
background selfies) it's still very good.
No doubt a gesture to users of the 2017 models that
while they would need to upgrade to the A8 or A8 + for true bokeh selfies via the dual front cameras, their current phone could also take a selfie with
background blur.
Using the two lenses together, both phones can capture bokeh - style
blurred background shots (Portrait Mode),
while the monochrome lens can be used separately to shoot great looking black and white photos without a filter.
It even worked on a picture without a clear foreground and
background, keeping my colleague's head sharp
while blurring everything around him.
My shot of a glass against the Manhattan skyline has a crisp foreground,
while the
background is
blurred out to create a shallow depth - of - field effect.
When used in tandem, they give you the ability to change the depth of field of a shot, so you can
blur the
background while shooting at portrait or focus to infinity when capturing a landscape, just like you would on a big mirrorless or DSLR.