8 Mobile Photography Tips Every Photographer Should Know

 

Using Readily Available Tools

With mobile devices, there are quite a few tools defining varying devices that often go unused. Proper utility of basic mobile devices puts the user in possession of a pocket film production studio. The technological capability of smartphones is such that full feature-length movies can be made on mobile devices, and in some cases, this has been done.

Well, a film is a bit more of an undertaking than a photo. Still, smartphones have the capability to do both; and many users don’t come within a stone’s throw of such potential. Accordingly, if you’ve got a phone, you don’t need a camera—not for most photo situations. If you’re a photographer on a budget, definitely consider what you could do with what you have.

Following we’ll briefly explore eight mobile photography tips to help you fully maximize the latent potential waiting within your smartphone, tablet, or other mobile device. Some of these tips are straightforward, others are a bit more complex. Hopefully there’s something here that, at minimum, stimulates you to make the most of what you already have.

 

1. Backup Picture Or Video, Clear Mobile Hard Drive Space

Smartphones don’t have infinite space. While Samsung has had a 1 TB mobile phone available on the market since 2019, most devices don’t have that much space. Even then, you’ll be surprised how fast your hard drive fills up. One photo tends to be around 3 megabytes (MB), if it has requisite quality.

There are over 1,000 MBs in a gigabyte (GB), there are right at 1,000 GBs in a terabyte (TB). So at an average of 3 MBs per photo, you’re looking at a little more than 333,333.333 photos on such a device. Call it 300k, because operating systems, apps, and other software fill up some of that hard drive space.

That seems like a lot, but it’s only 821 photos a day for a year. Meanwhile, one minute of HD video is about 124 MBs. That’s 134 hours of footage, or a little over twenty minutes of footage a day. If you’re doing a daily podcast that’s twenty minutes long, your phone will fill up quick. If that’s supplemented with photos, the same thing happens.

So what you want to do is backup all your photos to a hard-drive that’s external to your device when you’re done taking them, then delete them from your phone so you’ve got space for more photos or video. This way you’ll always have hours of recording space available, and you won’t have to delete any photos to keep that space.

2. Mobile Lenses Still Need To Be Cleaned For Best Results

This one’s pretty straightforward. Your lens will get dirty. You’ve got to clean it at intervals; preferably before each shooting session, if you’re going for quality. It’s going to get smudged and scuffed up in your pocket, so using a lens protector of some kind—whether improvised or available in the form of an accessory—is certainly to be advised.

3. Know How To Use “Burst” Mode For Action Shots

Burst mode captures numerous photos quickly, and is designed to catch action shots that would otherwise necessitate split-second timing. Practice using burst mode with animals or sports teams; you may be astonished at some of the footage you’re able to capture.

4. Take Lots Of Pictures – With Mobile Devices, You Can

Provided you’re backing up the photos you take externally, you’ve got essentially unlimited “film”. Prior digital photography, you’d be boxed in by how many pictures were on a given role of film. Now, you can take 10k pictures in a day and still have space for 10k more. So take lots of photos when you’re out pursuing photographic excellence.

5. Use Known Best Practices To Overcome Shadows

Shadows can be pretty irritating; especially when you’ve captured the perfect picture except for one detail or other that inhibits the final result. Thankfully, new technological workarounds exist that can help you find exactly the picture you intended even if you were unable to capture it in real time. Here’s a link on how to get rid of shadows in pictures to help you.

6. Assure Devices Are Properly Charged For Full Functionality

Smartphones will not capture live video for the same length of time they’ll retain charge when mostly dormant. Your phone might retain a mild charge for a week if you only interface with it once or twice and turn off the internet. If you’re recording video, it may only retain charge for a few hours. Before doing any photography or videography, assure devices are fully charged.

7. You’ve Got Plenty Of Free Filters, Use Them

Instagram has popularized filters, but professional photographers can make use of them as well. Sepia tones, distortions, effects, black and white, lighting arrangements—there’s a lot to play around with. Explore what you have, and consider downloading some niche filters as well.

8. The Value Of High Dynamic Range (HDR) Settings For Lighting

High Dynamic Range is a mode designed to capture quality photos when available lighting isn’t quite what it could be. Essentially, multiple exposures are combined in one image.

Sometimes results are as you would expect, sometimes they’re not quite how you wanted. You can also choose to keep the unaltered version. It’s a great mode for hard picture situations.

Getting The Most From Mobile Device Photography

Utilizing diverse camera apps, editing photos, making full use of HDR, exploring varying filters, keeping devices charged, using known best practices to overcome shadows, taking lots of pictures, exploring “burst” mode, cleaning lenses, and assuring you’ve got digital space represent some basic mobile photography best practices to consider.

These are the tip of the iceberg; though the truth is, most devices will have the capability for the rudimentary options outlined here. Certainly some devices are more capable than others.

However, it’s almost a certainty that you haven’t fully explored the possibilities of your mobile devices as regards photography or videography. So at minimum, use this writing as a starting point from which to explore the latent potential of your mobile device.

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22 Savage Instagram Captions Perfect For Throwing Shade

Instagram is really a fabulous app for millennial and it serves so many unique purposes. For starters, it is a great way to showcase the life you want to perceive yourself to be living and easily make others despise you for having what they don’t. The reality of it though is that what you perceive yourself to be on Instagram is just want you want people to think of you, not really who you are…but that’s a whole different story for later.

 

If you are going to fall into the flow of using Instagram to perceive yourself as something specific, then why not throw shade at all the people who did you wrong with a lovely caption and a photo that says, “nothing bothers me.” Captions are a perfect way to throw some shade via Instagram.

For Throwing Shade At The Boy Who Did You Wrong:

1. “Silly me, expecting too much from people again.” – Unknown

 

2. “Don’t come back when you realize that I’m rare.” – Genereux Philip

 

3. “Some people don’t realize what they have until it’s gone, but that does not always mean they are supposed to get it back.” – Stephan Labossiere

 

4. “I gave your nickname to someone else.” – Drake

 

5. “All discarded lovers should be given a second chance, but with somebody else.” – Mae West

 

6. “As usual, there is a great woman behind every idiot.”  – John Lennon

 

7. “All of my ‘let’s just be friends’ are friends I don’t have anymore.” – Drake

 

Plus-Size Model Recreates Celebrity Photo Shoots To Promote Body Positivity

Body Positive?

In today’s society, it’s hard for a lot of women to feel comfortable in their own skin when models are constantly looking slimmer and slimmer every day.

Social Media

Add social media apps and photo editing tools into the mix, everyone feels like a gross, fat, ugly slob when they go online.

Perfectly Imperfect

The truth is, not everyone is “perfect” and the majority of the time, people only post and show photos they edited/filtered or the outcome of trying 100 times to get the perfect angle.

Self Esteem

While we know this to be true, it’s still a knock on our self-esteem when we see seemingly “flawless” girls flooding our newsfeeds while we sit in our sweatpants and messy buns.

Plus Size Heart

One plus-size model is using her Instagram, however, to clap back at those seemingly flawless women and make a new wave of beauty on her own.

Diana Sirokai uses her Instagram profile to show off her curves and what many would call “flaws” and promote body positivity. She poses in anything from tight dresses to lingerie with inspiring and moving captions. Her goal is to show other women who feel insecure about their bodies that their flaws can too be their power.

Remember You are just as special as the woman you idolise

I wanted to show the parts of my body that I thought they made me less of a beautiful girl and here I am as A beautiful young woman who turned her Flaws Into her own Power by just starting to Love them. #MyFlawsAreMyPower#ISlay@photo_karizza@delicatesavage

“I bet she can’t even fit in the bath” – I even have space for you boo boo #ButIGuessItsTooFancyForU?@photo_karizza

10 Things to tell yourself every morning before starting off your day. * I AM HEALTHY * AND   I AM STRONG
* I AM POWERFUL  AND * I AM HAPPY
* I AM BLESSED AND * I AM WEALTHY *AND  I AM GRATEFUL * TODAY I AM A BETTER VERSION OF MYSELF THAN YESTERDAY * I CAN DO IT
AND * I AM LOVED
#ConfidenceWithDiana?@photo_karizza

Diana also decided to pose up against two big models and influencers in the industry to showcase that plus-size women can also be praised and glorified the same way as thin women and models.

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