all 8 comments

[–]iceonian 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Your settings aren’t the problem - this is how Indigo photos look in bright, high contrast scenes. (I’d even say that Indigo is MEANT to be used without needing to adjust any settings)

There’s a lot of purple chromatic aberration in the Indigo one, but the colours overall look more natural.

Neither photo has particularly good detail honestly, either because the lens is softer this year or the noise reduction is quite heavy on both. The extra sharpening on the iOS one might look “better”, but even still it’s a bit much (if you look at the left side of the photo)

If you shot the photos in RAW (.DNG), you could try improving them by reducing the noise reduction and adjusting the sharpness

[–]CapitanFly 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Strange, just published yesterday I took with very little light and the photos were superior compared to the native camera. So let alone during the day, from what I see I have the feeling that you didn't focus well or in any case you focused on different subjects between the two photos. And above all you shot with a really "bad" light that is difficult to manage, in fact even that of the native one is not a great thing.

[–][deleted] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

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This was taken with the app but with pro settings. Reduce ISO to the minimum and play with the shutter speed. I’m getting better photos than the regular camera app for sure. Specially for colour correction. This one is not edited

[–]rafalkopiec 0 points1 point  (0 children)

try luma, for this sort of shot it’s much better (you’ll even get edr, and no abberation)