How To

How to take better photos without a flash

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Flash photography is a skill. It is more than just pointing your phone’s camera at something and then snapping a photo. This is because while our smartphones have flash units that have improved leaps and bounds massively since they were first introduced, they’re still not necessarily that great.

This is because unlike proper flash units that can be angled and diffused, the flash units on our phones are direct and harsh. If you’re trying to create that effect, that’s fine, but otherwise, flash can sometimes ruin a photo and in cases more often than not, it can give your subject the dreaded red-eye effect.

Best Android phone for taking photos

So the question is, how do you take photos in low-light situations without flash? It’s actually quite simple and with a few tweaks, you can coax out better-looking photos in the dark without having to use flash.

How to use your smartphone’s manual mode

A lot of smartphones these days come with native camera apps that offer up a manual mode. With manual mode, it gives users more control over their phone’s cameras and individual settings in order to get the shot that they want, and here are some of the changes you can make to improve photos in low-light scenarios without having to use flash.

ISO changes the sensitivity of your phone’s camera sensors. Similar to EV and shutter speed in auto mode, ISO is automatically determined by the camera software to find the right balance for the particular shot, but as we said, sometimes it isn’t always ideal.

You can increase the ISO to help take brighter photos or lower it if the photos you take are too bright. Increasing the ISO basically lets your phone’s camera capture light faster, but we should warn you that setting an ISO that is too high will result in your photos being too “noisy” and having a very grainy effect.

Sometimes this can be done on purchase to achieve a particular look, but other times too much noise and grain can make a photo unusable.

Tyler Lee
A graphic novelist wannabe. Amateur chef. Mechanical keyboard enthusiast. Writer of tech with over a decade of experience. Juggles between using a Mac and Windows PC, switches between iOS and Android, believes in the best of both worlds.

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