Paul Ozzello
Member
OK great - it's working now!I'm working on that missing wheel, I try to uploaded new build currently.
The green dot is probably the iPhones "camera on" light on status bar.
OK great - it's working now!I'm working on that missing wheel, I try to uploaded new build currently.
The green dot is probably the iPhones "camera on" light on status bar.
OK great - it's working now!
Results will be extremely disappointing due to lack of contrast in the GG image and extreme falloff in the corners. Also the phone camera may struggle a bit with the low light levels, although with today's phones, this may not be a severe issue. The problem with falloff/vignetting and inherently lower contrast will spoil the broth.This may not be important (or may be obvious), but I imagine with LF you could put the phone under the dark cloth and image the ground glass directly?
The problem with falloff/vignetting and inherently lower contrast will spoil the broth.
Sorry for the late answer! I added a comment in Testflight about a week, but I am not sure it made it to you? Currently I can't see the analysis output on my iPhone SE.
This is really cool,
btw if you want to try this out, you can betatest it with this link: https://testflight.apple.com/join/MfSnZoX7
I'd test it out in a heartbeat, but I only have an android phone...
Testing on an iPhone SE II, the reading agree with a trusted light meter both in absolute accuracy and in dynamic range. I did notice situations where the readings would drift after changing the scene, as if there is some running average being calculated. I'll spend more time using it to see. Otherwise, I really like it, it's intuitive and I'm far more willing to trust my phone as a light meter using it.
I'm using it too - I'll leave some feedback once I know what I'm doing ;-)Wow! So nice to hear, really!
There is no running average at all, I assume it is maybe the phone camera algorithm that adjusts the exposure, perhaps? Also what fools me time after time is that the "box" value is really calculated from the whole box area, not just center of it. So if you have even tiny bit of drastic change in luminosity, it will affect to the reading. The boxes can be set so small that even slightest change of the measured area can change the output value. I don't know if this is the case, but I have to check this myself too.
I'm really glad that it is working for you!
OR just take a spot meter and point it at the brightest location with detail and then the darkest location with detail and compare the two. No app needed.
Another issue I can raise, using lower right photo posted in Post 61...the upper left corner of that bottom right rectangular area (which was assessed at -2EV), is that the trees there are considerably darker than the rest of that rectangle. So while that rectangle is assessed at -2EV, the trees themselves are darker than that value!
Is there a way to control the camera zoom or increase cell granularity?
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