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SynthCam

Have you ever wished you could take an iPhone picture that had a shallow depth of field like an SLR? Or a picture in a dark room that didn't come out noisy? Or a tilt-shift shot that makes the world look like a miniature model? This app lets you do all these things.
Category Price Seller Device
Photo & Video Free Marc Levoy iPhone, iPad, iPod

To use it, first find a scene that isn't moving (except for objects you'd like to blur out). Point the camera at a foreground object and press Record (red button). Make sure the object has some details the app can lock onto. Slowly move the phone left, right, up, and down, while keeping it aimed straight ahead. Don't tilt the camera, don't move it forward or backward, and don't move too far; an inch in each direction should suffice. After 10-15 seconds, press Pause (black bars) to view your "synthetic aperture photograph". The foreground object should appear sharp and the background blurry, like the first screenshot below. Photographers call this blur "bokeh". If the foreground comes out blurry instead, then tracking has failed. Touch to focus on a object with more detail, and try moving slower. This takes some practice.

For shooting in low light, do the same thing but record for only a second or two and hold the camera still. The app will track your subject, removing camera shake and sensor noise. The 4th screenshot below is a single frame, and the 5th screenshot is a 3-second recording. Although the goal is usually to translate the camera instead of tilting it, you can produce some cool effects if you break the rules. Read the description below (under What's New in Version 2.0) on simulating a tilt-shift lens.

How does SynthCam work? There are lots of apps out there that capture a single image and blur it to simulate a shallow depth of field. This app is different. Every 30th of a second it captures a video frame, tracks the object you pointed at, aligns it to the same object in previous frames you captured, and blends the frames together. You don't see this happening, and you don't see the result until you press Pause, but your iPhone is very, very busy. By the way, the native iPhone camera app lets you touch to focus, and objects you don't focus on are blurry. But because the iPhone's lens is small these objects are not very blurry. Using this app, you can create a much shallower depth of field. The tradeoff is that the output image is HD video resolution, not still photo resolution.

This app has been tested on an iPhone 4, iPhone 3GS, and iPod Touch 4. It may also work on an iPad 2, but it isn't optimized for that. If the app doesn't work for you, press Preferences (the gear icon), then Help, and read the Troubleshooting section. This help text, along with screenshots, examples, and some instructional videos, are available at http://marclevoy.com. If you come up with a great image, or think of a use for SynthCam I haven't mentioned here or on marclevoy.com, send me email! (Use [email protected].)

Reviews

Love it.
Anthony Vangeli

It can take some great pictures. However, moving from an iPod touch 4 to an iPhone 4, I notice that when actually recording a photo, it only updates what the camera sees on screen every two or three seconds, whereas on the iPod touch 4 I would see smooth video on the screen, like I was recording it. The iPhone 4 has a better camera, and it does have extra things such as autofocus, but those can be locked during capture, so I don't see why it has to be extremely laggy. Photos still come out beautiful, but only because I knew what I was doing based off of how it ran on an iPod touch. I doubt this app will get updated, I don't even think that the 1080p resolution of the iPhone 4s has been taken advantage of, so I suppose I'll just have to live with it... If others get this app and it's laggy for them and they have no idea what they are doing, then it may just be another 1-star review. :-/ (but based off of the time that the last update came out, I bet the developer has forgotten about the app anyway.)


Fun and creative
Chris in the Pelican State

...but a bit trick to use. Use small movements to begin, and use a long synthesis time.


Straight from Stanford
JMANTN

Great app that is a must for my toolkit. Would like to see higher output quality with iPhone 4S if possible.


Not good - not worth the hassle! There are better options out there.
Med74

I'm surprised (and a bit suspicious) to see so many high ratings. I have a lot of photography apps, and this one is just not good. As others have mentioned, it takes a while to get the hang of it, but even after that, I don't think the pictures are good or accurate at all. It's not worth investing your time trying to get better at it. I prefer the Big Lens app for the depth-of-field effect.


Takes My Best Photos
Corvus.Corax.

I can't say it magically turns my tiny iPod camera into a DSLR, but it comes closer than I could have guessed. Excellent for still subjects in any lighting conditions. Highly recommended. It is absolutely worth learning how to use this app. (If you are a point-and-clicker instead of a photography enthusiast, you may not enjoy experimenting as much as I have.)


works great on iPad2
iPadfan)4$:

Use the low light photo tips to breathe new life into the iPad2 camera! Thanks!


Great but...
VaAaHiD

If it become a universal app become a great app in app store.


Fantastic!
RonFSwanson

Now I can get some decent photos with my Ipad 2!


Very nice
Zombie Christ

Does just what it says


deleted
Delias Lamp

followed the directions didnt work delete


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