Professional photographers rarely used iPhone cameras five years ago, but images produced by the iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus are – under the right circumstances – indistinguishable from dedicated point ...
Following the October release of its redesigned "Selfie" 4-in-1 Photo Lens for the iPhone 6 and 6 Plus, Olloclip is today introducing two new lens sets to expand the range of options available to ...
The maker of the quick-connect three-in-one lens for the iPhone adds a 2x telephoto and circular polarizer lenses to its lineup. Managing Editor Josh Goldman is a laptop expert and has been writing ...
You can't consider yourself a true iPhonographer without an arsenal of accessory lenses. The iPhone camera is good (terrific, in fact), but any pro shooter will tell you it's the quality of the glass ...
Still thinking of ways to improve your iPhone 4/4S snapshots? You might want to give this circular polarizing filter lens (CPL) made especially for the said devices a try. The filter is attached to a ...
The Olloclip must be one of the most useful iPhoneography accessories around. It’s a tiny clip-on widget which adds three additional lenses to the iPhone: macro, wide-angle and fisheye. And until now, ...
Not only do Gizmon’s Clip-On Lenses offer a smart and speedy way to mount them on your iPhone, but they also break with the now-common fisheye-telephoto-wideangle triumvirate (mostly at least), ...
Which polarizer lens filter is best? Photographers of all skill levels love shooting images of nature on bright, sunlit days. But if you’re just starting out with DSLR photography, you may find your ...
Maybe you're doing some undercover work and need a clear shot through a windscreen or window. Maybe you just find glare and reflections really annoying. If only there was a way to take better photos ...
A camera lens filter is pretty much what you’d expect: it’s a physical piece of glass that attaches to your camera’s lens, filters the light before it reaches the sensor and, typically, has an effect ...
Photographer and videographer Edward Aites, of Seattle, submitted this time-lapse video to Science Friday. He looked at ice through a macro lens and cross-polarizing filters, and found a colorful, ...
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