A wider aperture makes it easier to
shoot in darker conditions without a flash.
Not exact matches
Pictures
shot indoors
in natural
conditions tend to be
dark or grainy.
Shooting in truly
dark conditions is also a bit pointless both because
shots go very grainy and washed out and because the lack of a flash means the tablet can't help light things up.
As your family settles into the basement, an auspicious array of monitors, and an even more perilous telephone, takes centre stage, a
dark conduit between Carl and the government, which is really calling the
shots in this game of control and
conditioning.
There's no OIS (optical image stabilization), so performance can quickly degrade
in darker conditions, and hand motion can introduce blurring into photos, even
in relatively well - lit
shots.
If we were to nitpick, it would be the over softening of the images
shot in the
dark with that moonlight LED option but it's a really tough
condition for any camera to
shoot.
Naturally, shake creeps
in extremely
dark situations, so it's best not to get too comfortable and a good idea to keep the phone as stable as possible when you're
shooting in extra
dark conditions.
There's also a highly capable manual
shooting mode which, with a little stabilization, can produce excellent long exposures
in darker conditions.
With Dual Aperture, the S9 and S9 +» rear camera can switch between F1.5 aperture and F2.4 aperture depending on the lighting
conditions — the former is used
in the
dark, while the latter will be employed
in extra bright
shooting conditions.
That's not it has a dual camera setup on back, the secondary sensor on the back has a 4MP resolution but is capable of
shooting in extremely
dark conditions with infrared flash support.
Like most mid-end phones, the HUAWEI nova 3e takes good
shots when there is ample light but struggles
in darker conditions.
Image capture
in low - light
conditions is especially impressive: Auto HDR + helps particularly with
shots that have a lot of variance
in light and
dark.