✔️ 2022-04-22 01:00:03 – Paris/France.
A selfie in default mode (left) versus a selfie with Mirror Front Photos activated (right).
Alison DeNisco Rayome/CNET
Apple's latest iPhone operating system, iOS 15.4, arrived in March, followed by a small update called iOS 15.4.1. (And iOS 15.5 is in the works.) iOS 15 introduced new photo and video features like ProRes for iPhone 13 Pro and an improved version of QuickTake for iPhone. But a smaller camera feature, which has been around since iOS 14, can make the biggest difference to your selfie needs: a setting called Mirror Front Photos.
Read on for everything you need to know about the Mirror Front Photos feature – and how you can use it to up your selfie game.
What exactly does Mirror Front Photos mean?
You may have come across this setting in your camera settings before and wondered what it is. When you turn it on and switch to your front camera, it takes a photo that's your mirror image, instead of flipping it like the camera usually does. Some people find this shocking because the photo you take does not match the image you see in the viewfinder.
In the end, it might not make much of a difference to your selfie, but I prefer the more familiar inverted version of my face that I see in the mirror. Just keep in mind that other people – who don't usually see your face in a mirror – might find these selfies a bit strange because it's a reverse version of what they're used to. to see.
How to Use the Mirror Front Photos Feature on Your iPhone
With iOS 14 (or 15) installed, the Mirror Front Photos setting is disabled by default. Here's how to activate it:
Go to Settings > Camera. Under Compositiontoggle Front Mirror Photos on. Go back to your camera app, turn the camera to face you and take a selfie. The saved image will appear as you see yourself in the mirror, instead of being reversed as usual. Note that your front camera automatically mirrors the front camera's viewfinder, so this setting only affects the image saved in your photo library.
Here you can see the side by side comparison of a normal selfie and a selfie taken with Mirror Front Photos enabled.
iOS 14 and 15 give you the choice of mirroring your selfies (right) or keeping them inverted (left).
Patrick Holland/CNET
You can follow the same instructions to disable Mirror Front Photos and return to the default selfie setting.
For more, find out how to FaceTime with Android users in iOS 15, which iOS 15 settings to change, and what to know about the iOS 15,5 second beta.
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SOURCE: Reviews News
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