- 10-13-2012, 03:45 AM #1Junior Member
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- 8
I had bought my new Nokia 808 pure view phone but
while taking pictures i felt some doubt for taking pictures of small objects or you can say of a bird/animal.
While Focusing by touching the screen,really difficult for small objects.
So i tried a lot to set the specifications but didn't get the picture as i want.P
lease anybody please help me out in this regard.
Thanks in Advance.
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- 10-13-2012, 09:52 AM #2Junior Member
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Re: Nokia 808 pure view phone..??
41 meg it is not easy to handle in a small phone i think that what the reason the phone fails..
- 10-20-2012, 03:50 AM #3Newbie
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- 3 - liked 1 times
Re: Nokia 808 pure view phone..??
Hello everyone !!
Its not the problem of camera,but it is the thing how you focus your camera sensor.
Here is the trick i am dictating gone through the same and let me know.
Position camera 15cm away from subject.
Launch Camera > Creative Mode > select PureView > Aspect ratio either 16:9 or 4:3 > Resolution from 8MP, 5MP, 3MP, 2MP > JPEG quality Superfine > Color tones Normal > Capture mode either Normal or Self-timer 2 seconds.
Go back to the screen and long press the screen, choose Close-up.
From 15cm (6") away from subject, zoom all the way towards subject.
Click and snap the picture.
- 10-23-2012, 03:56 PM #4Sr. Member
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Re: Nokia 808 pure view phone..??
I heared that the camera was not very good, I think you should have got a samsung or iphone?
- 10-30-2012, 03:59 AM #5
Re: Nokia 808 pure view phone..??
One of my friend using this phone. This is nice phone and camera is superb for video recording. He is happy with this mobile till now.
- 11-08-2012, 02:21 AM #6
Re: Nokia 808 pure view phone..??
I am using a Nokia 808.
With Belle FP2, there were camera updates that allow you to easily change the focussing mode to "Close up" (macro).
You simply tap and hold your finger on the image while in camera mode; it then brings up a menu of which focussing mode to select. You still have the 10-15cm distance needed, but it allows for much easier focussing on close objects.
Another approach is to leave the camera further back, and to use the built-in zoom while in PureView mode. You lose out on the noise reduction as pixels aren't being combined in the same way, but it allows for an easy focus on a small object.
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