by: Jamie Cuevas

The latest iPhone models use a ton of auto-enhancing and software to adjust photos that you shoot with the camera, and much of that auto-editing happens immediately on-device after the camera snaps a photo, some of this is Deep Fusion, and some of it are numerous other features that Apple has incorporated into the iPhone camera software. While the results of iPhone Cameras auto-editing often look great, sometimes they don’t represent what you’re hoping to capture, and it’s not unusual for the iPhone Camera auto-editing photo feature to do things like remove the intensity of a sunset, or take pinks/reds/purples out of a colorful morning sky, or to ridiculously auto-enhance someones skin tone to the point where it looks unnatural or certainly not like the person’s complexion does.
One way to get around the auto photo enhancement and camera auto-editing features on iPhone is to toggle a feature on called “Prioritize Faster Shooting”, which as the name implies will prioritize taking more photos in quick succession in lieu of tons of auto-enhancements. The result is that photos captured on iPhone Camera will look less processed, and may be more representative of what you intended to capture with the lens in the first place.