Rishabh Bansal wrote:
Hey,
There is no such phone that is specially made for editing purposes. You can edit images in any good phone. It is just you must have good photography and editing knowledge.
but the Nokia 9 Pureview gets high marks from me
the camera app has wonderful presets, well thought out ergonomics & the screen seems quite accurate using my Eizo CG 277 as benchmark ...its processor/video subsystems were well chosen & tweaked for its unique camera system
the phone works fine, though I am not an Android fan, much preferring WebOs or Winmobile, but both no longer supported
while I hate the lack of expandable memory & the absent earbud jack, the quality of photographs from this camera awes me, particularly for available light product work
it can capture DNG files or its superb preset jpgs & you can shoot both
it has five 12 mp cameras which cleverly combine to produce very low noise, high resolution images with simply amazing OOC color depth, accuracy & resolution ...like the superb Windows phone camera, it allows control of ISO, shutter speed & exposure compensation ...it has many modes available for shooting
this is one I took shortly after getting it & was converted from the DNG in C1
worked in C1 from DNG hand held iso 341 1/45 sec
Nokia has been a leader in smartphone cameras & put together, along with partners like Zeiss, Light & Qualcomm developed a idiosyncratic jewel that runs Android One & handles light better than any phone I have used
I'll forgo the headphone jack in the interest of water/dust resistance as long as it delivers such wondrous photographs that are so simple to tweak
I have a much larger version of this & other samples from this exceptional smartphone camera system in my pbase gallery ---> here
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"Avoid making a commotion, just as you wouldn’t stir up the water before fishing. Don’t use a flash out of respect for the natural lighting, even when there isn’t any. If these rules aren’t followed, the photographer becomes unbearably obtrusive" -- attributed to HCB