Making Sense of Camera Phone Photo Settings
Welcome to My GPS Camera Phone! Make sure you don't miss out - subscribe to the RSS feed. After you've left six comments, nofollow tags are lifted, giving you some awesome some link love. Thanks for visiting!
For most of us, the camera phone is a simple point-and-click experience with no real thought given to making the shot better. Let’s face it, camera phones have a bad reputation when it comes to image quality. However, today’s newer models are paying more attention to the camera than ever before.
In this post, I’m going to run through some commonly found camera phone photo options that you may not be aware of and how to use them. For this example, I’ll be referencing the options of my nearly-indestructible Casio G’zOne, type-V camera phone. The G’zOne camera settings can be accessed by switching to the camera and then selecting the right menu button for the options.
Option 1: Resolution
As mentioned in a previous post, the camera resolution can make or break the quality of your photos. The G’zOne has resolutions ranging from 120×160 pixels to 1200×1600 pixels. More pixels means larger images and more flexibility with what you can do with them. The drawback, however, is that more pixels will reduce the amount of photos you can store on your camera phone due to the larger file sizes. In my opinion, it’s a trade-off I’m willing to take, even with a phone that doesn’t have expandable memory.
Option 2: Self-timer
The G’zOne self-timer feature allows you to set a shutter delay for three, five or 10 seconds. Why would you need this for a camera phone? Consider your body position when taking a camera phone photo: arms extended and raised up, steadied by nothing but sheer willpower. Unfortunately, willpower isn’t going to get you that clear shot. To get the clearest possible shot, prop up your phone, compose the picture and shoot with a shutter delay. This allows the camera to be completely still while doing its work and makes for much better photos. As an added bonus, you can be in the shot, too.
Option 3: Flash
As expected, the flash on a camera phone isn’t going to be much. In fact, it’s usually so weak that I make every effort to avoid using it. The G’zOne flash is interesting in that it comes on for a second, presumably to avoid red-eye, and then the picture is taken. Most other camera phones have similar weak flashes or none at all. If there’s something worth shooting in low light, try working with the self-timer and the brightness settings to capture it before using the flash.
Option 4: Brightness
The brightness setting allows you to manually adjust the exposure level of the camera, providing you with more flexibility in variable lighting conditions. Let’s say there’s a great shot of your friends on the beach, but the sun is blazing and the light bouncing off the sand is blowing out the exposure. An easy adjustment to the brightness level will usually bring the image into something more identifiable. Likewise, low light conditions can be overcome somewhat by increasing the brightness.
Option 5: White balance
For the most part, you will leave this set to “auto,” probably because it isn’t worth manually setting or you have no clue what it’s for. In a nutshell, different sources of light emit different color temperatures, which cast different light colors on your subject. The white balance settings - incandescent, fluorescent, daylight and auto - provide you a way to compensate for the different light you will be shooting in. Auto usually makes for a decent color exposure, but sometimes it has no white to reference, thereby resulting in washed out images. If you really want the shot, manually adjust the white balance to match the light source.
Option 6: Shutter sound
Yes, shutter sound is exactly that. On or off, sound or no sound. Why should you seriously consider this when taking camera phone photos? Let’s say you’re in a nature preserve and you spot a rare animal that hasn’t been seen in years. Quietly, you take out your camera phone (because you forgot your digital camera), line up the shot and capture it. You can hardly contain yourself as you frame the next shot, only to realize that the animal ran off because of that annoying camera clicking sound. Upon reviewing the one shot you did take, it turns out that the photo is blurry and unrecognizable. Nobody believes you and you’re labeled a gold-digging hoaxer, forever ruining your career as a naturalist. All because of the shutter sound.
Option 7: Color effect
With the advances in freely available photo editing software like Picasa, I personally feel that utilizing on-board photo effects is unnecessary. However, if you aren’t into geeking out on processing photos all night, then these are for you. With settings like mono (monotone or black-and-white), negative, sepia and normal, you can achieve neat effects right when you capture the photo.
Now go try it out
Hopefully, this clears up any confusion for some of those unused features on your camera phone. The next time you’re out and about, experiment with the camera settings. You might be surprised at what your camera phone can produce.
Author’s note: In my opinion, the Casio G’zOne type-V is far superior to the type-S, with the only potential drawback being the lack of bluetooth capability. The type-S has bluetooth, but all other features are inferior to the type-V. Compare them and see for yourself.


















This post has 2 comments
June 21st, 2008
Now what I’m wondering, is how you would properly clean a cellphone lens, I reckon it’s mighty easy, but what if something gets inside, can it be taken out and taken apart?
Great review, detailed, and very well written. :)
Chicas last blog post..Photohunt: Water
My preferred method is the good old T-shirt wipe. The lens is so exposed to being beaten up that I’m not overly concerned about it.
My phone is so airtight that if anything did manage to get in there, I wouldn’t be able to get it out (which would be a great excuse to buy a new phone!).
Thanks for the visit.
June 21st, 2008
Now we know why there aren’t any good, clear pictures of Bigfoot: the simulated camera shutter sound scares them off!
I too would recommend against using any in-camera effects. I have old video clips that I shot in sepia or black and white, and now I wish I had them in color! I think the best approach is to think of your shots or video as “raw” footage to be manipulated (if need be or desired) later on the computer. You can’t undo many of the effects that are done in-camera. You can’t get the color back from a black and white image.
I also had some video clips I did in negative (worse were the ones where I flipped back and forth to simulated being “nuked” or something). With those, I could just reverse the colors and it was okay, for the most part, except for the black edges which become white that way. For photos, that might not be an issue, but for video I wasn’t about to go frame by frame adjusting the white!
Best thing is just save those effects for later. Post-production as it were!
Great post!
dcrs last blog post..Success Saturday: Have a Personality, Your Personality
Add a comment