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reasonablyminded t1_jaccta8 wrote

For real? Taking photos in RAW and doing a small edit took away the overprocessing?

Im about to buy a 14 Pro Max but I’m a photographer, so I’m naturally very picky about image quality. It’s making me rethink my decision.

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SniffUmaMuffins t1_jad3a9w wrote

Yes it works. I’m a hobbyist photographer. This approach worked for me with my old iPhone 13 Pro, as well as with my current iPhone 14 Pro.

I’d bet money Apple won’t change this for the iPhone 15. They tend to be very stubborn and proud when it comes to back peddling features that don’t work properly. This auto brightening of backlit subjects needs some sort of setting, and/or the ability to edit afterwards. It’s totally broken.

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reasonablyminded t1_jae6oyp wrote

Thanks for your insights.

I’ll follow the sub to see if they improve it at all (doubt it), but getting a higher storage model would also give me comfort in shooting in ProRAW.

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bearyoverit OP t1_jacuen4 wrote

It gave me workable results, I wouldn’t say it’s 100%. If you have an 11 pro or newer I’d stay there until the 15 tbh.

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reasonablyminded t1_jacvfaq wrote

I’m from Brazil, where iPhones are stupidly overpriced. I’m traveling to NYC in May and I was planning on grabbing a 14 Pro Max, since my 11 is pissing me off already.

I’ll think about it a bit more. Waiting for the 15 would mean paying the stupid Apple tax towards the end of the year.

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bearyoverit OP t1_jacxn7n wrote

My best advice is if you have any friends who have it, ask them if you can test it out.

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