right corner of the photo. To delete the burst of photos, tap it, then tap .
Apply a filter: Tap to apply different color effects, such as Mono or Chrome. To turn
off a filter, tap , then tap None. You can also apply a filter later, when you edit the
photo. See .
A rectangle may briefly appear to indicate where the automatic exposure is set. When you
photograph people, face detection balances the exposure across up to 10 faces. A rectangle
appears for each face detected.
Exposure is automatic, but you can set the exposure manually for the next shot by tapping
an object or area on the screen. With an iSight camera, tapping the screen sets the focus
and the exposure, and face detection is temporarily turned off. To lock the exposure and
focus, touch and hold until the rectangle pulses. The screen indicates when exposure and
focus are locked. Take as many photos as you want. When you tap the screen again,
exposure and focus unlock, and the automatic settings and face detection turn back on.
Start shooting from the Home screen. On iPhone 6s and iPhone 6s Plus, press the
Camera icon, then choose a quick action. See .
Take a Live Photo. (iPhone 6s, iPhone 6s Plus, and iPhone SE) With Live Photos turned
on, tap the Shutter button. You record what happens just before and after you take your
photo, along with the audio. The screen indicates the duration of the Live Photo exposure.
Live Photos is on by default. To turn it on or off, tap . (Yellow is on.)
Adjust the exposure. Tap to see next to the exposure rectangle, then slide up or down
to adjust the exposure.
Take a selfie with Retina Flash. (iPhone 6s, iPhone 6s Plus, and iPhone SE) Use the
Retina HD display as a True Tone flash for your selfies. Turn the flash on, switch to the
FaceTime camera, then tap the Shutter button (the display flashes upon exposure).
Take a panorama photo. (iSight camera) Choose Pano, tap the Shutter button, then pan
slowly in the direction of the arrow. To stop the pan, tap the button again. To pan in the other
direction, first tap the arrow. To pan vertically, rotate iPhone to landscape orientation. You
can reverse the direction of a vertical pan, too.