Think of the iPhone as an electric guitar, and the stock camera app as the amp. With a little skill, you can create almost any images you can imagine. People have NO IDEA just how versatile this tool really is, and it's quite amazing. Here's a little super-secret trick that I use: after editing your photo, upload it to your desktop Mac. Then bounce it back down to your iPhone. This will reset your editing settings back to zero. This allows you to create a "2nd pass" of editing, which is where things get really interesting. You can repeat for multiple passes, and this will make a number of changes to your photo. I won't spoil all the details and leave that for you to play around with. For my most recent photo book project, I used two passes: I first editing the settings on the original photos, then uploaded to the desktop Mac, then downloaded back to iPhone, then applied a second round of edits with different settings. I did this 2nd round to make the images pop a little more and bring out some of the specific colors and details in my images.
Can't you do the same thing by simply saving a copy of the photo when you've finished editing? You can on Android (you get the option to "save" or "save as copy"). Much quicker and simpler than uploading/bouncing/downloading etc. 🙂
Did you adjust the photo after showing the black point? The lights on the top wete washed out by the exposure but in the before/after, they showed up pretty clear.
Does this course cover editing on other software like Lightroom Mobile or Snapseed? The iPhone app is ok but pretty basic without any ability to do local adjustments. No histograms. Also no saving presets or saving an edit to sync to other photos. This alone makes it too tedious & slow to edit on the iPhone app.
Thanks for tutorial. Is the course discussed in the video different to the iPhone Editing Academy advertised by Emil? This video seems to concentrate on the iphone editor, but Emil's course appears to mainly use Snapseed? Thanks Michael
Get the full iPhone Editing Academy course here! 👉 iphone.to/iphone-editing-academy-ytvpc1
Recommed this course to anyone, these videos are brilliant
Bonsoir, merci pour toutes ces informations et explications
Good evening, thank you for all this information and explanations
Think of the iPhone as an electric guitar, and the stock camera app as the amp. With a little skill, you can create almost any images you can imagine. People have NO IDEA just how versatile this tool really is, and it's quite amazing.
Here's a little super-secret trick that I use: after editing your photo, upload it to your desktop Mac. Then bounce it back down to your iPhone. This will reset your editing settings back to zero. This allows you to create a "2nd pass" of editing, which is where things get really interesting. You can repeat for multiple passes, and this will make a number of changes to your photo. I won't spoil all the details and leave that for you to play around with.
For my most recent photo book project, I used two passes: I first editing the settings on the original photos, then uploaded to the desktop Mac, then downloaded back to iPhone, then applied a second round of edits with different settings. I did this 2nd round to make the images pop a little more and bring out some of the specific colors and details in my images.
Can't you do the same thing by simply saving a copy of the photo when you've finished editing? You can on Android (you get the option to "save" or "save as copy"). Much quicker and simpler than uploading/bouncing/downloading etc. 🙂
Great segment on editing.
Did you adjust the photo after showing the black point?
The lights on the top wete washed out by the exposure but in the before/after, they showed up pretty clear.
Won’t bringing the brightness all the way up burn the phone battery much faster though?
But you only do it while you're editing ... change it back after. I have to remind myself every time I want to edit a photo LOL
@@sabrinaferguson oh I thought it said bring the brightness all the way up while one was taking pictures 🤷♂️
@@gilmourwatersthats what i thought too then will hardly have enough battery to take photos!
why did you not talk about the other last adjustments??
Do you know if there’s a tool that warns you to stop using each slider (when your photo’s clipping), like in Photoshop/Lightroom?
Thank you so much
Thanks for sharing the video 🙏🏽👍🏼
Thanks! Finally know what those buttons do!😂
Thanks
Thanks for the video.
Small point about terminology... You can't "click" on a touchscreen. It would be better to say "tap" or "select". 🙂
It says page not found
We are sorry about that! You can use this link to learn more about the course and join: secure.iphonephotographyschool.com/iphone-editing-academy
Does this course cover editing on other software like Lightroom Mobile or Snapseed?
The iPhone app is ok but pretty basic without any ability to do local adjustments.
No histograms.
Also no saving presets or saving an edit to sync to other photos.
This alone makes it too tedious & slow to edit on the iPhone app.
Apply has an option now to copy edits to other photos
Thanks for tutorial. Is the course discussed in the video different to the iPhone Editing Academy advertised by Emil? This video seems to concentrate on the iphone editor, but Emil's course appears to mainly use Snapseed? Thanks Michael
Hi Michael, this video will be part of our new iPhone Editing Academy course. If you already purchased it, you'll get this update free. :)
0:48
The 2 crucial settings you turned off for editing, should they be turned off when shooting?
No, it's not necessary to turn them off when taking photos.
@@iPhone_Photography_School Thank you
Would it be cheating if I just used the auto function? 😂 I have over 400 photos to go through
Not at all! As long as you get the results you want, you can use any method to edit your own photographs. :)
I do not see the brightness tab on my phone
Swipe from the top right of your iPhone to get the control center where the brightness slider is available.
Thank you!!
Couldn’t get my phone to do anything when I swiped down.
Swiping down works on all iPhone models. Please try it again, sliding your finger from the front camera downwards.
@@iPhone_Photography_School I finally got it!
For some iPhones (mine is the 8), you need to swipe up
Not clear enough for a totally newbie on an iPhone. Everything is said and done too fast
Feel free to adjust the video speed and pause while trying it out. :)
this guy is unbearable