Yellow photos in low light

My pictures taken in low light (indoor), just one small bulb for example gets yellowish. I tried to change the white balance but for no good. Is it just something I have to accept or what?

But of I look at photos taken with iPhone 5s for example, they're much more natural in the colors. Therefor I don't think that the bulb is the problem. I thought that my z1c was the best to take low light photos when I bought it almost one year ago. But oh no!

Similar Messages

  • Nokia N8 camera - noisy photos in low light

    I am dissapointed that N8 camera take very noisy photos in low light conditions. in the night the photos looks horible, but not only in the night, even if you are inside and there is no very much light then the photos are noisy.
    I had the same problems with my old N73. After that I had a N95 8Gb and this phone tooks good photos even in the night. Now with N8 I am back to N73 noisy photos I can say that N95 8Gb photos are better than N8 photos, without exagerating.
    Is there a camera application that I can use instead of  original camera appl from Nokia in order to take better photos? Otherwise I would need to change my phone again 

    I tried the Camera Update from Betalabs and also I took the CameraPro 2.2 from Store. No changes, same noisy photos in Low light. CameraPro is a useless application, no improvements to original Camera appl from Nokia and has some bugs. Maybe only the Antishake option is good, since if using the dedicated button to take photos then sometime are blurred.
    I think the LowLevelDriver for Camera is the problem in N8 photos, so no application can solved this. I read an article from Nokia and they said that intentionally changed the Camera behavior in order to have very good photos in good light, this causing noisy photos in low light. I can not understand this. If I want very good photos I would use a DSLR, but I want good photos in all conditions, like with N95 for example.

  • Camera wont take a photo - warning "Low light" on screen

    The camera and phone have been working fine*, until today when I get the error message on screen "low light" when trying to take a picture.  It is being used in a room with normal lighting.
    The warning only goes away when I point the camera directly at a light bulb.
    The camera refuses to take a photo, regardless whether the warning is displayed or not.
    Changing from auto <-> night mode has no effect either.
    Any suggestions?
    *Apart from a few weeks ago, the video zoom in/out stopped working, although it did take photos and videos ok.

    Hello Mark,
    Welcome to the BlackBerry Support Community.
    Sorry to hear about the issue you are experiencing with the Camera application on your BlackBerry smartphone.
    Please reinsert your battery as a test. If this fails to resolve the issue, perform a reload or upgrade the BlackBerry Device Software. For more information on this procedure see the following article:
    How to update or reinstall BlackBerry Device Software using BlackBerry Desktop Software - http://www.blackberry.com/btsc/KB03901
    Let us know if this helps.
    -FB
    Come follow your BlackBerry Technical Team on Twitter! @BlackBerryHelp
    Be sure to click Kudos! for those who have helped you.
    Click "Accept as a Solution" for posts that have solved your issue(s)!

  • Capture better photos in low-light conditions

    The camera in your device provides several modes and settings to help you take photos or record videos in most conditions. When the lighting conditions are poor, refer to the following tips:
    Use Normal capturing mode instead of Scene recognition capturing mode. Once you are in Normal capturing mode, use the Party scene setting and/or the Multi autofocus setting for better results.
    Use Fill flash mode.
    Use the Infinity focus setting when recording videos.
    Use the camera key correctly. Press the camera key halfway down to activate the auto focus setting. Press the camera key fully down to take a photo when the focus is locked correctly.
    Your subject should be as still as possible while you are taking a photo.
    Your camera should remain as steady as possible.
    To use Normal capturing mode
    Activate the camera.
    Hold the phone in landscape orientation.
    Drag the slider button at the top right of the screen accordingly so that the still camera is selected.
    Tap the capturing mode icon at the top left of the screen, then select Normal.
    To use the Party scene setting
    Make sure the camera is in Normal capturing mode.
    Press the Menu key, then select Scenes.
    Tap Party.
    To use the Multi auto focus setting
    Make sure the camera is in Normal capturing mode.
    Press the Menu key, then select Focus mode.
    Tap Multi auto focus.
    To use Fill flash mode
    Activate the camera.
    Hold the phone in landscape orientation.
    Drag the slider button at the top right of the screen accordingly so that the still camera is selected.
    Press the Menu key, then select Flash.
    Tap Fill flash.
    To use the Infinity focus setting
    Activate the camera.
    Hold the phone in landscape orientation.
    Drag the slider button at the top right of the screen accordingly so that the video camera is selected.
    Press the Menu key, then select Focus mode.
    Tap Infinity.
     - Community Manager Sony Xperia Support Forum
    If you're new to our forums make sure that you have read our Discussion guidelines.
    If you want to get in touch with the local support team for your country please visit our contact page.

    The FAQ is general and available options can differ depending on what phone you have.
    When using manual mode for video recording in Xperia Z1 you can select between Single auto focus, Face detection and Object tracking. Which one you should select depends on what your filming.
     - Official Sony Xperia Support Staff
    If you're new to our forums make sure that you have read our Discussion guidelines.
    If you want to get in touch with the local support team for your country please visit our contact page.

  • N73 crashes when taking photo under low light cond...

    My N73 crashes almost always when I take photos under bad conditions, i.e. when it is very dark, or when the camera is too close to an object to focus. I am aware that it sounds a bit improbable, but it has happened at least 20 times now, and never under good conditions.
    The symptoms are variable: The phone stops reacting to keys, sometimes entirely, sometimes I can only switch it off and on, sometimes only the active standby works.
    Sometimes it helps sliding the camera open and shut repeatedly, then the camera software (which I think is to blame) shuts down.
    Sometimes I can only remove the battery to reset it.
    Does anybody else notice the same?
    It is not really reproducible, but it happens too darn often.
    PS: My phone firmware is V3.0638.0.0.2 (Vodafone branded).
    PPS: Please don't tell me to use the phone only in bright sunshine.

    02-Nov-200709:10 PM
    korngear wrote:
    For PS: Upgrade your phone FW.
    Hm.. Doesn't seem possible. According to http://europe.nokia.com/softwareupdate I have the latest FW. I suspect there are more recent updates for non-Vodafone-enslaved phones, but I am unsure whether (let alone how) I can use them.

  • Tips for avoiding "noisy" images in low-light

    Hi all,
    I noticed that there are a lot of users here who are complaining of noisy images especially in low-light. I'm not a professional photographer or anything but I have been playing a lot with the camera of my Xperia Z1 and I did have noisy images also at first.
    Here is my tip: Use these settings:
    Go to Manual Mode.
    Shoot in either 8MP 4:3 or 16:9 (don't worry about not making use of the 20MP, because its still doing oversampling to improve the quality of the 8MP image by making use of the whole 20MP sensor).
    Set Stabilizer to off
    ISO to Auto (if you prefer more detailed images, set ISO to a lower value but take note of the exposure of the image and that there is a chance of motion blur due to the longer shutter speed necessary to capture low light at low ISO)
    WB Auto (or your preference).
    With the setting I use above, I've seen improvements on low-light capability (indoors, artificial lighting, or night outdoor scene for example) and quality of my camera pictures. Note though that this will not be applicable for extreme low-light. Its very normal to capture really noisy images when shooting in extreme low-light (even my dedicated compact camera has troubles too).
    Here is my theory why its taking noisy images by default. In Superior Auto, I analyzed the EXIF data of the pictures I've shot. It seems that Superior Auto is really excessive in bumping up the ISO (thus resulting in more noisy images) to compensate for having a faster shutter speed (reduced motion blur). Thus what you get is a noisy image that is bright and freezes the motion. For example, test it out that in Superior Auto, even minute movements of the phone will trigger the Sports Mode (running man icon near the button) prioritizing a faster shutter speed at the cost of a higher ISO.
    Another reason I have for turning off the Stabilizer in Manual Mode is the same. In contrast to Steady Shot used in recording movies (sensor based shift to compensate for handshake movements), I think the Stabilizer option basically just bumps up the ISO also to compensate for handshake movements. I"m not entirely 100% sure but so far, I've been satisfied with taking images with the Stabilizer Off.
    Please feel free to test it out and report the results if there have been improvements. I'm still testing it out too! One of the things I wish for Sony to put in the Camera App are just these 3 things: 
    1.) Holding Shutter Key will open the Camera app with the LAST CONFIGURED SETTINGS
    2.) Maximum ISO can be set in Manual Mode
    3.) Scene AUTO mode for Manual Mode (I know it might be redundant but it would be nice to have Auto mode for 4:3 orientation images).
    Again, hope to hear from others what are their settings or if they notice any improvements in images captured.
    Thanks!

    Hi, there is a FAQ related to this topic.
    http://talk.sonymobile.com/t5/FAQ/Capture-better-photos-in-low-light-conditions/m-p/395397#U395397
    Don't forget to mark correct answer as Accepted Solution.
    If you find the post helpful, press Kudos.

  • Nokia X6 Camera in Low-Light?

    Currently have a Nokia N82 with Xenon flash which I'm finding hard to replace due to the distinct lack of xenon-equipped phones around these days, although the poor thing does now appear to be dying after over two years of heavy use (although a new battery may be enough).
    Just wondering how the dual-LED flash copes with taking photos in low light conditions on the X6? Is it good enough to take pics of friends in a bar type thing? To be honest the xenon flash on the N82 still has nothing on a proper digital camera, but at least you can see stuff, unlike on most single-LED camera phones I've tried.
    Any other thoughts on the X6 welcome, too. Tempted to buy one today!

    Camera stores used to sell hand held flash "guns" that were independent of cameras. I'm sure such things still exist.It would probably be easier to use a proper camera, though. I have a Sony digital P&S that takes very nice pictures which are easily transferred to the iPad using the Camera Connection Kit.

  • The ipad mini does not have flash for pictures. Is there an app that can add flash for low light?

    Since the ipad mini does not have flash for taking photos in low light situations I'm wondering if there is an app that one can use with flash?

    Since there's no flash mechanism on the device, I doubt there's an app. You can't control what isn't there.

  • Blue streaks in low light photos? iPhone 4s

    Is anyone else having blue streaks show up on iphone 4s photos? Only happening in low light/indoor photos. Daylight photos are great. I don't have a case on either. Any thoughts?

    Definitely a hardware issue. Took it to the Genius Bar, they swapped the camera out of my phone (didn't know they could do that) in about 15 minutes.

  • IPhone 4s low light blurry photos

    All the pictures I take in low light settings are extremely blurry, sort of like foggy. Is this happening to any of you guys? I allow it to focus, but ALL of them come out blurry.

    They did not exchange it. From what the genius told me is that HDR was on during low light situations and should be on. Not sure if it's BS or not. He said the 4S processes images differently because of the 5 lens, etc...
    I never had this problem with the iPhone 4 though. I left HDR on all the time and thought it automatically turned it off during low light situations?
    I havent tried anything since upgrading to 5.01 so I need to try taking low light pix.

  • Blurry, out of focus, grainy low light photos Noki...

    Hi,
    I have had a Nokia N95 8GB since April and on the whole I am really happy with everything apart from the camera. Day time shots as far as I can tell are OK but night time/indoor/low light shots are a different story. A lot of shots are grainy, the flesh tones don't look right (face shots have odd red speckling) and very often the shots are simply out of focus or very blurred (like camera shake). This despite me trying to be very careful to keep the camera totally still. I have also experimented with different settings - custom, night portrait etc. All to no avail.
    I have previously owned a Casio Exilim Z750 camera which I used to use when going out with my friends, but I was hoping that I could leave that at home as it didn't make sense to carry that as well.
    Please has anybody else had similar problems? How can I fix this?
    thanks,
    Dom.

    That sounds about right. Night shots (or low light shots) are not very good with the N95 or N95 8GB.
    If you use the flash the subject needs to be about 1m from you otherwise the flash is useless.
    640K Should be enough for everybody
    El_Loco Nokia Video Blog

  • Settings Suggestions (Low Light Performance)

    For about a month once I year I do some photography work, primarily portrait type photos, (at a local amusement park for their halloween event) so everything is done typically at dusk and after dark under a lot of special effects lighting. For the last couple years I used my Canon Rebel T3 with a Canon 50mm 1.8 lens, recently I aquired the 1.4 version. After getting the 1.4 I'm considering using my Canon 50D as well for this years run. I'm just seeking advice on how to achieve less noise perhaps? For both bodies? Rebel seems noisy in low light sometimes, I've managed some nice results last year with the help of a external flash on it but I don't like blinding my coworkers working the event... so there's a bit of work going into my photos post production sort to speak before sharing the images. I never been to sure as to what settings to use, I primarily just shoot in either TV or AV mode. It would be an all new experience for my 50D as I usually take it to my local zoos to take pics because I use my 28-300mm lens on it, so any advice is appreciated!
    I am considering buying a 6D, or a Nikon in the future but for now I'm just settling with what I got.

    If money were no object, a 1Dx and a Canon EF 50mm f1.  But seriously buying a 6D, or a brand-N, is not going to help.
    At least not much more than what you already have.  BTW, the 50mm f1.4 you did aquire is only 1/2 stop faster than the 50mm f1.8 you already had.  Not a deal maker!
    I love shooting at night and at dusk.  You can get some truely interesting photographs.  My best advice is shoot.  Yes, shoot a lot.  Because experience is the best teacher.  No body here can tell you what settings to use.  They have not seen the venue!
    Sometimes Tv will work and sometimes Av will.  Even P will at times.  I would avise you to stay away from the 'fully automatic' choices, however.  The best advise is learn your equipment.  Go to the Mall and shoot. Go to a park. Try the Zoo after dark. Any place to get the experience.  But shoot!
    EOS 1Ds Mk III, EOS 1D Mk IV EF 50mm f1.2 L, EF 24-70mm f2.8 L,
    EF 70-200mm f2.8 L IS II, Sigma 120-300mm f2.8 EX APO
    Photoshop CS6, ACR 8.7, Lightroom 5.7

  • 6D low light video

    Hello,
    I'm trying to shoot video in low light and I'm getting some extra hue and contrast.  When I shoot stills, what I see on the screen is what I see on my computer.  When I flip over to video (with out changing ISO or WB settings) the images are darker and have a green hue.
    I need what I'm seeing on the screen of the camera to be what I see on my computer monitor after I download of the card. 
    Any ideas?
    Current setting: Exp 1/30, ISO 8000, WB 3200, f-stop 2.8
    What I've tried: IPB and All-I compression, different SD cards rated for different speeds, formatting the card with the camera, and shrinking still images to 1920X1280 - Same results ever case

    RobertTheFat wrote:
    Skirball wrote:
    I don't know about you, but my stills (RAW) are always darker than they are on my camera (6D); which is a jpg and might be part of the source.  It wasn't near as noticable on my 450D.   I just learned to adapt my eye and I check my histogram anyway.  But I'd say the actual image looks about a 1/2 stop darker on my computer than the camera.  I don't think it's abnormal to have small differences between the camera screen and computer.  THere are too many variables to deal with to be consistent.
    The most obvious explanation for that phenomenon (which means that you've probably already considered it and ruled it out) is that you've turned up the brightness of the camera's display screen. That setting is independent of all else, and it's easy to turn it up when the ambient light is high and then later forget that you did it. And maybe you didn't have the screen turned up as high on your 450D.
    Also, of course, even a RAW image gets darker if subjected to any white balance correction (because that correction can only subtract, not add, light). I'd expect the screen to display the corrected image, but conceivably it doesn't.
    Yes, that was the first thing that crossed my mind, but not just that the setting was turned up, but that the display is simply brighter.  Although my old 450D seemed to be closer to the actual exposure it was terrible in the shadows.  Things would look black on the camera but I'd still have detail on the actual photo.  
    I didn't bother looking for a brightness setting on my 6D for several reasons.  1) the brightness is really nice when you're out in bright sunlight; 2) I recognize there are far too many variables to expect any consistency between a small jpg with settings applied on a 3" backlit LCD to a full sized RAW file on a calibrated IPS monitor in a dim room; 3) I check my historgram constantly,  I never trust what I see on the image, it's just a preview to get you in the ballpark; and 4) the IQ and recovery on the 6D is so good that I know if the image looks decent on the camera then I'll be able to make it work in post.

  • 5D Mark 3 Low Light Images = really slow!!!

    Hello,
    I've got a rather odd problem. When shooting in low light (think pitch black, lightning shots etc) the 5d mark iii takes forever to display the image on the preview screen. It takes up to a minute or more and I can see the red light (indicating the camera is busy writing?) flickering the whole time. Thinking this was a memory card issue, I switched over to the SD Card slot (I was shooting CF before) and encountered the same issue. I'm using San Disk Extreme (30MBPS) CF Card and Extreme (45MBPS) SD Card. 
    Are these cards not fast enough for what I'm doing? I'm shooting in RAW + JPEG, writing to only one card.
    I thought it was a camera defect, but I talked to a friend of mine who had just bought his Mark iii and he had the same complaint.
    Anyone else encountering this problem or did we just get a bad batch?
    Any light you can shed on this issue would be greatly appreciated.
    Solved!
    Go to Solution.

    I swore when I read this the second time I saw something about the screen flickering, not the read light.  Seems I'm losing it.
    I use the Lightroom noise tool for light noise reduction of everyday type photos.  But if I'm doing something that needs a lot of work - HDR, photochopping, or just really high ISO, I use Imagenomics Noiseware.  It can be a bit heavy, but I usually just feather in a NR layer overtop of my normal image(s) accordingly.  It does really well on low key images, getting a uniform Black.

  • IPhone Camera - distorted vertical stripe in low light

    My iPhone 5 camera (on rear side) recently started showing a distorted vertical stripe down the left side of the screen in low light. It starts as a yellowish stripe, and as the light gets lower, it turns more distorted with pinks and blues (see attached screenshot). In sunlight outdoors, there is no visible stripe. Any ideas on
    what can be done about this?
    Message was edited by: met_fan

    Hi there met_fan,
    You may find the troubleshooting steps in the article below helpful.
    iPhone: Hardware troubleshooting
    http://support.apple.com/kb/ts2802
    Camera isn't functioning or has undesired image quality
    If the screen shows a closed lens or black image, force quit the Camera app.
    If you do not see the Camera app on the Home screen, try searching for it in Spotlight. If the camera does not show up in the search, check to make sure that Restrictions are not turned on by tappingSettings > General > Restrictions.
    Ensure the camera lens is clean and free from any obstructions. Use a microfiber polishing cloth to clean the lens.
    Cases can interfere with the camera and the flash. Try gently cleaning the lens with a clean dry cloth or removing the case if you see image or color-quality issues with photos.
    Try turning iPhone off and then back on.
    Tap to focus the camera on the subject. The image may pulse or briefly go in and out of focus as it adjusts.
    Try to remain steady while focusing:
    Still images: Remain steady while taking the picture. If you move too far in any direction, the camera automatically refocuses to the center.
    Note: If you take a picture with iPhone turned sideways, it is automatically saved in landscape orientation.
    Video: Adjust focus before you begin recording. You can also tap to readjust focus while recording. Exiting the Camera application while recording will stop recording and will save the video to the Camera Roll.
    Note: Video-recording features are not available on original iPhone or iPhone 3G.
    If your iPhone has a front and rear camera, try switching between them to verify if the issue persists on both.
    Issue not resolved
    My issue is still not resolved. What do I do next?
    Contact Apple Support.
    -Griff W. 

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