Fixing photographs taken on a phone is easier said than done. Having said that, there is nothing like a challenge. How far you go with any adjustments will depend on the results you want to achieve but there is inevitably going to be some compromise in the end.
Below are different versions of one of the phone photographs taken in the woods at Fforest (see previous posts). The HDR option was switched on and so I had two versions to work with – but neither one was satisfactory! Two much strength in the sunny highlights in the original and too much green saturation in the HDR version. Some darks needed lifting, others not. Some highlights needed recovery, some not.
The first image is the one I will use. The second two images are the two (adjusted) versions of the original shot. The adjustments I made in Adobe Lightroom were not enough to satisfy me. The solution was to combine selected areas of the two versions in Photoshop.
Comments very welcome on this issue.
The last two photos are the original and HDR versions of another shot which are both in their original state from the phone. They illustrate the problem quite well.
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Oh for some reason I thought you were going to talk about fixing phone photos *on the phone* like what apps are good editors and what they do, etc… still, thanks for the good info here! Cheers 🙂
Sorry if you were misled by my post title. However, I would strongly recommend Snapseed as one of the best iPhone photo editing apps. I find Photoshop for the phone good too. Have fun 🙂
http://iphonephotographyschool.com/ is an excellent site / blog for lessons and advice etc about working with iPhonography.