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A Smartphone for A Photographer

Started May 31, 2015 | User reviews
Ted Jo New Member • Posts: 1
A Smartphone for A Photographer

I've been waiting for long time a smartphone camera that is reliable enough for a photographer like me.
I've just bought for a day and test the manual setting feature, and I like it very much.
Lens equivalent 28mm, clear and sharp
I can set these things manually:
WB, ISO: 50-2700, S: 30s-1/6000, AE-L, MF/AF

 Ted Jo's gear list:Ted Jo's gear list
LG G4
LG G4
5.5 screen • 16 megapixels (rear) • 8 megapixels (front)
Announced: Apr 28, 2015
Ted Jo's score
5.0
Average community score
4.5
rjjr Forum Pro • Posts: 14,769
Re: A Smartphone for A Photographer

Ted Jo wrote:

I've been waiting for long time a smartphone camera that is reliable enough for a photographer like me.
I've just bought for a day and test the manual setting feature, and I like it very much.
Lens equivalent 28mm, clear and sharp
I can set these things manually:
WB, ISO: 50-2700, S: 30s-1/6000, AE-L, MF/AF

I bought a G4 a few days ago specifically for the manual control of the camera and ability to produce RAW (DNG) files.  I also appreciate the fact that the battery can be replaced and it takes a micro SD card.

GossCTP Veteran Member • Posts: 6,206
All roses save for the app
1

Ted Jo wrote:

I've been waiting for long time a smartphone camera that is reliable enough for a photographer like me.
I've just bought for a day and test the manual setting feature, and I like it very much.
Lens equivalent 28mm, clear and sharp
I can set these things manually:
WB, ISO: 50-2700, S: 30s-1/6000, AE-L, MF/AF

I like mine a lot as well. The lens is impressively sharp - at least in the center. Aside from the vignetting, it isn't too bad towards the corners either. After shooting head to head with my DSLR I have to say that 16mp is not too many pixels for a smart phone camera. At least not one with a decent sized sensor and a fast enough, sharp enough lens.

The screen is an absolute beauty. Resolution is ridiculous overkill for anyone with human vision, but the colors from the IPS screen are very pleasing and accurate. This site looks better on my phone than it has on any of the calibrated monitors I've used to date.

Despite some reviews stating that the HDR mode uses multiple shots, I'm pretty sure it is just cross processing the raw data. I've used the HDR mode a fair bit and have had no issues with moving objects in the photos. At the same time, the effect is not very pronounced and tends to have more shadow noise than one would expect from true HDR.

My only real gripe is with the camera app that so many sites rave over. In the non-manual modes, the jpegs have too much NR and sharpening applied, neither of which can be reduced. The manual mode seems quite clunky. I feel one should be able to manually set one parameter (shutter or ISO) and leave the other auto, but it seems to be all or nothing with the app. Bracketing would seem to be omitted as well. Granted, no phone I've had before had any of these things, but none of the phones I've had before was good enough to consciously take in lieu of a dedicated camera.

-- hide signature --

Nothing worth hearing has ever been spoken into a megaphone.

 GossCTP's gear list:GossCTP's gear list
Panasonic Lumix DMC-LX5 Pentax K20D Pentax K-5 II Fujifilm X-H1 Pentax smc FA 50mm F1.4 +8 more
jakegrahamphotography
jakegrahamphotography Regular Member • Posts: 184
Re: A Smartphone for A Photographer

rjjr wrote:

Ted Jo wrote:

I've been waiting for long time a smartphone camera that is reliable enough for a photographer like me.
I've just bought for a day and test the manual setting feature, and I like it very much.
Lens equivalent 28mm, clear and sharp
I can set these things manually:
WB, ISO: 50-2700, S: 30s-1/6000, AE-L, MF/AF

I bought a G4 a few days ago specifically for the manual control of the camera and ability to produce RAW (DNG) files. I also appreciate the fact that the battery can be replaced and it takes a micro SD card.

Looking at picking up the LG G4 as well. If I take photos in RAW on a MicroSD Card (from a Sony Camera meaning ARW files), will I be able to read, edit and modify these files using Lightroom Mobile?

If so, this could be a game-changer and greatly reduce my workflow.

Thanks!

 jakegrahamphotography's gear list:jakegrahamphotography's gear list
Sony a7R IV Zeiss Batis 18mm F2.8 Sony FE 100-400mm F4.5-5.6 Tamron 28-75mm F2.8 III Sony FE 135mm F1.8 GM
KingTing
KingTing Regular Member • Posts: 233
Re: A Smartphone for A Photographer

Yes you can but Lightroom mobile is quite a lot different compared to the standard
--
Welcome to have a look at my gallery:
http://www.dpreview.com/galleries/7740447566

Still new and learning, any tips would be GREAT

 KingTing's gear list:KingTing's gear list
Sony a7 III Voigtlander 15mm F4.5 Super Wide Heliar Voigtlander 21mm F1.8 Ultron Sony FE 55mm F1.8 Sony FE 70-200 F4 +3 more
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