Adobe launched a new iPhone camera app to help Capture Clear Photos. It is free, works on recent iPhones and adobe accounts are also not required to start shooting.
Adobe launched Project Indigo for iPhone
Adobe dropped only a new computational photography App for iPhones Project is called indigo. And the interesting thing is that one of the people behind it is Mark Levoy, the same man who helped to create computational photography magic, which stood out Google’s early pixel cameras (and, and, it is not yet available on Android, which is ironic).Released through Adobe Labs last weekIt works iPhone 12 Pro And iPhone 12 Pro Max, iPhone 13 Pro/Pro Max and all iPhone 14 Model and up. However, Adobe recommends using it on one iPhone 15 Pro Or later for the best results.
The app captures 32 frames and adds them to the same photo – a little like HDR or night mode on your iPhone, but taken forward with more control and more frames. Certainly, you will have to wait for some extra seconds after sometimes stretch, but the payment cleaner shadow, low noise and better dynamic range.
See the difference: The left is a single iPhone shot in very low light (1/10 lux), while Indigo’s handheld photo on the right, has been merged with 32 frames to cut the noise. , Image Credit – Adobe
IndiGo provides a “tall exposure” button. , Image Credit – Adobe
And, as you want from the pro-level camera app, it gives you control over hands on hands, ISO, shutter speed, white balance (with fine-tuning for heat and tint), and exposure adjustment.
Project IndiGo also improves digital zoom using a multi-frame super-resolution technique. When you zoom beyond 2 ×, it snaps many small shift shots – thanks to your natural hand movement – and merge them to make a clear, sharp photo.
The app is serving as a test ground for features that may appear in other top-level adobe products, such as a tool for removing annoying reflections. Further, the team is working on adding an Android version, a portrait mode and even video capture capabilities.
Your next iPhone photo may look fast
Your iPhone can take better photos. , Image Credit – Adobe
One of the best things brought smartphones is is a good camera in our pocket – just ready to snap good photos with a tap. In addition, you can edit and share those shots from the same device, which is super convenient.
And Project IndiGo today deal with some biggest grip people with people’s photos today – such as images that are very bright, vice versa are lacking, there are too much color saturation or suffering from heavy stagnation and sharp. Adobe is aiming to fix those issues at the source.
It should just start
Complete disclosure: I can’t try the app myself because I have one iPhone 13 miniWhich is not supported due to “physical memory barriers” (bummer). App doesn’t work either iPhone 12 Or 12 mini.
Nevertheless, from Adobe shown, the project indigo looks like a real step – sharper details, better lighting and photos that also look great on the big screen.
Since this is just the beginning, it is exciting to think about what Adobe can bring next-it is a new version of Indigo or something new that mixes mobile photography and editing with the next level computational photography and AI.
Oh, and AI talk – Adobe’s firefly app launched only on iOS and AndroidLet anyone type what they want and let them make images and videos.