Camera Modes

 

Portrait Mode. This Image mode sets a wide aperture in order to get a shallow depth of field and to blur the background for taking portraits.

Sports Mode. The sports camera mode sets a faster shutter speed to freeze the motion of the subject in wildlife/sports/action photography.

In “Aperture Priority” mode, you manually set the lens aperture, while the camera automatically picks the right shutter speed to properly expose the image
Manual mode forces you to constantly change all of the settings any time the light changes. Using an automatic, or partially automatic, mode can adjust settings
Macro photography is extreme close-up photography, usually of very small subjects and living organisms like insects, in which the size of the subject in the photograph is greater than life size
With Cinematic mode, your iPhone camera can record videos with a shallow depth of field and add beautiful focus transitions for a cinema-grade look.
Night Mode – Used in low light conditions, with Night mode, your camera uses a slower shutter speed to capture the details in the distance,
Bulb mode will allow you to determine your own shutter speed if the cameras slowest speed isn’t slow enough for you.
Full Auto–Mode is the main camera mode most novice photographers rely on when they start in photography. Using this dial mode, the camera automatically selects
Close up mode is for pictures of flowers, insects or any other small subject matter that requires you to get in close.
If you are in auto mode, the camera will do all of the work. It will choose the settings it thinks is right for that scene that is currently in the frame
Underwater mode does exactly that – it allows for the best type of exposure when you are shooting in water.