At the club, at the bar, or just in your mom's basement, nighttime is when you come out to play. Rate this thread to express how the Moto G6's camera performs when no or low light is present. A higher rating indicates that the camera sensor "sees" lots of light in dim conditions, and that the resulting photos have minimal noise. A higher rating also indicates that when the flash fires, the resulting photo is evenly-lit without any bright spots.
Then, drop a comment if you have anything to add!
Low light performance is not good; very grainy, colors are bad. Outdoor/daytime pics are decent though.
It's true in that the low light pics aren't the greatest. Still, the image stabilizer works well in low light, and the f1. 8 aperture is a huge help for photos without flash.
Personally, I don't mind some noise in certain low light shots. It adds some old school 35mm film vibe to the photos, which I love.
The quality in low light is very similar to shooting with a Ricoh GRD4. It's grainy but it's usable. I'm still having trouble diffusing the onboard flash without the flash reflecting back to my image, but for now, I use the Aputure ML-M9 to compensate.
Actually the low light performance impressed me big time. I've recently used Moto G6 play, Moto Z, and Moto X 2014. The G6 camera is very comparible to the Moto Z and blows the other two away. Last night I took a pic of my cat in very dim evening lighting. Don't get me wrong, it wasn't pitch dark, but it would have been hard to read a book.
https://photos.app.goo.gl/MzXoideRvWox7Wp18
Really nice cam. i loved it in natural light. IT IS A MID RANGE CELLPHONE.
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At the club, at the bar, or just in your mom's basement, nighttime is when you come out to play. Rate this thread to express how the Samsung Galaxy S9's camera performs when no or low light is present. A higher rating indicates that the camera sensor "sees" lots of light in dim conditions, and that the resulting photos have minimal noise. A higher rating also indicates that when the flash fires, the resulting photo is evenly-lit without any bright spots.
Then, drop a comment if you have anything to add!
Much better than I expected!
Really looks good took pictures in low light and everything came out good.
I just started an youtube channel focused on camera test and reviews, and my first upload is a low light test between my 2 phones: Galaxy S9 and Mate 10 Pro. I will sell one of the phones to keep new ones comming for new reviews. So wich one would you choose? (daylight review comming soon)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S6QlGoBpCzI&t=16s
The rear camera in low light situations is awesome. But the selfie in low light is very bad, even when I am outside at night and there's a lot of lights.
At the club, at the bar, or just in your mom's basement, nighttime is when you come out to play. Rate this thread to express how the Huawei P20's camera performs when no or low light is present. A higher rating indicates that the camera sensor "sees" lots of light in dim conditions, and that the resulting photos have minimal noise. A higher rating also indicates that when the flash fires, the resulting photo is evenly-lit without any bright spots.
Then, drop a comment if you have anything to add!
Really good at night, and the noise reduction is pretty good. The night mode tends to oversharpen and mess up the white balance. However, it still adds a ton of dynamic rabge and if held steady, gives you very decent shot half the times. It can't always nail the exposure though, Google does that better with night sight.
Non night mode shots are usually a bit underexposed to save the highlights from blowing out. Sometimes, the Auto Hdr will kuck in , and you will have to hold your phone steady for a second.I find taking hdr pucs rather slow with p20.
There is a decent amount of detail, but sometimes the oversharpening can make it look bad, but of course p20 pro beats p20 by a decent margin because of the quad bayer pixel binning.
The manual mode is really handy for low light. You can even shoot bulb mode(super long exposure), the iso range 50-3200, exposure is +-3, same for the monochrome camera. Manual focusing sucks with the stock camera, as there is no focus peaking.
I prefer using OpenCamera HDR for daytime, it's way better than stock camera app as long as we are talking close to base ISO.
At the club, at the bar, or just in your mom's basement, nighttime is when you come out to play. Rate this thread to express how the LG G7 ThinQ's camera performs when no or low light is present. A higher rating indicates that the camera sensor "sees" lots of light in dim conditions, and that the resulting photos have minimal noise. A higher rating also indicates that when the flash fires, the resulting photo is evenly-lit without any bright spots.
Then, drop a comment if you have anything to add!
some pictures taken by the stock camera, except the first and second taken by the google camera.
5/10 for low light performance.
LG G7 has 1 micron sensors both wide and main. The sensor is not suitable for low light as it introduces lot of noise. But LG have a trick up it's sleeve "Super bright camera" which combines 4 megapixels into one giving 4 megapixel image. This produces bright but very soft image with details lacking. This approach is inferior to the likes of Google/Huawei night mode as they keep shutter open for longer time.
But it has some pros when shooting a scene with moving objects.
It struggles in low light. Very low quality pictures are coming out.
At the club, at the bar, or just in your mom's basement, nighttime is when you come out to play. Rate this thread to express how the OnePlus 7 Pro's camera performs when no or low light is present. A higher rating indicates that the camera sensor "sees" lots of light in dim conditions, and that the resulting photos have minimal noise. A higher rating also indicates that when the flash fires, the resulting photo is evenly-lit without any bright spots.
Then, drop a comment if you have anything to add!
Outdoors I actually just use the normal camera if there is some artificial lighting, the pictures look very authentic with minimal noise.
https://photos.app.goo.gl/TH31Q6d9V8b2L9vPA
There is no way I can keep the camera steady for 5 seconds without using a stand and that also brings up the "movement" issue, not everything is dead in the water.
Extreme low light (just natural light from a curtained window). Can anyone associate each image to the correct camera app? All I'll say is that the last pic has the most accurate colors for Celebi.
I used gcam 6.1, 6.2, and stock cam with my own configs (for gcam ports). Edit: 2 pics are rotated, but they're upright in gallery :silly:. Added hint.
I went to a dark museum is Niagara Fall and was really impressed with low light
Okay something changed. Don't if it was an update or maybe something changed after root and changing kernels but before I would have have quality 3 starts but now it seems 4.5 at least as far as picture and video.
At the club, at the bar, or just in your mom's basement, nighttime is when you come out to play. Rate this thread to express how the Google Pixel 5's camera performs when no or low light is present. A higher rating indicates that the camera sensor "sees" lots of light in dim conditions, and that the resulting photos have minimal noise. A higher rating also indicates that when the flash fires, the resulting photo is evenly-lit without any bright spots.
Then, drop a comment if you have anything to add!
Really impressive low light performance as expected.
Night mode portrait shots are unreal. I have been comparing to my wife's pixel 4 and the difference really is night and day
Mdizzle1 said:
Really impressive low light performance as expected.
Night mode portrait shots are unreal. I have been comparing to my wife's pixel 4 and the difference really is night and day
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That's interesting that the night mode has better results on the Pixel 5 compared to the Pixel 4. The camera hardware and software are both exactly the same.
jimv1983 said:
That's interesting that the night mode has better results on the Pixel 5 compared to the Pixel 4. The camera hardware and software are both exactly the same.
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The pixel 4ndoesnt seem to be able to use nightmode when taking a portrait yet
XDA_RealLifeReview said:
At the club, at the bar, or just in your mom's basement, nighttime is when you come out to play. Rate this thread to express how the Google Pixel 5's camera performs when no or low light is present. A higher rating indicates that the camera sensor "sees" lots of light in dim conditions, and that the resulting photos have minimal noise. A higher rating also indicates that when the flash fires, the resulting photo is evenly-lit without any bright spots.
Then, drop a comment if you have anything to add!
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You see any problem in display like hitting in outdoors if you use only few minutes
Test
Testing
Low light photos taken with the wide lens are horrendous, once the ISO creeps up they are quickly become unusable with terrible noise towards the corners.
Of course you can use night sight and then you don't have a lowlight photo any more.
MrBelter said:
Low light photos taken with the wide lens are horrendous, once the ISO creeps up they are quickly become unusable with terrible noise towards the corners.
Of course you can use night sight and then you don't have a lowlight photo any more.
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They have not improved it at all have they, wide angle low light shots are absolutely crap