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Chris Amberg's avatar

People swearing they can “always” tell the difference between a phone pic and a “pro camera” image amuse me. I remember when light beer first became popular - and dedicated beer snobs swore they could always tell the difference. I had my roommate do a blind taste test. He utterly failed.

Tina Wittmore's avatar

Great Post! I used to have a photography business which helped pay for lens upgrades and new camera bodies. After a few years of UNuse I discovered that the batteries have all gone kaput and replacements are hard to find, expensive or low quality. Or all three! I really wanted to get back into photography for myself so I decided to ‘use what I’ve got’.

Since then I’ve been very satisfied with my iPhone 16 Pro Max or Max Pro? I’ve been on several photo journeys and am always pleased with my results.

I’ve been using the Photos editing software, which has markably improved over the last few versions. I do find the auto edits can feel over processed but it’s fairly easy to dirty it up.

I have loved Lightroom since day one but abhor the subscription model.

I think a lot of editing styles become personal preference and are also subject the current trends in society. Neither is better or worse; wrong or right. For me it’s about trying new settings or new tools that can help me add to my repertoire of editing styles.

Thanks for sharing and I’m going to try Mood to see what develops 😉

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