Moshi Vesta iPhone X Textile Pattern Case - Bahama Blue Reviews - Newest

The bahama blue Vesta case from Moshi adds not only premium military-grade drop protection to your iPhone X, but also a wonderfully idiosyncratic vintage fabric effect complemented by a metallic frame. Form meets function in this elegant, effective cover.

I took the iPhone XS Max and Note 9 around San Francisco to the heights of Twin Peaks, the streets of the Mission and the lower level of the Xfinity CNET Smart Living Home to see how each handled real-world situations. Overall, photos from the iPhone XS Max have better dynamic range than those from the Note 9. A lot of that comes from the new Smart HDR feature. Take a look at pictures I took of Senor Sisig's food truck in the Mission. The one from the iPhone XS Max holds the highlights in the clouds and in the yellow building on the left side of the photo.

The Note 9 exposed its photo brighter, showing more detail in the shadows of the shelves on the food truck but clipping the highlights in clouds and yellow building, The iPhone XS Max photo also has more color saturation than the Note 9, Notice the differences between the photos below taken of a couple gazing over San Francisco from Twin Peaks, The iPhone XS Max shows off its dynamic range holding the details in the white shirt and not crunching the shadows of the the rocks to black like the Note 9, When taking moshi vesta iphone x textile pattern case - bahama blue reviews the photo with the Note 9, I saw the "sky" icon for scene optimization, which seemed to boost the contrast..

I like how Samsung's scene optimizations are not over-the-top like Instagram filters. They're subtle but have a big impact on image quality like Smart HDR on the iPhone XS Max. In the photos below I took a picture of a cappuccino and hand pie from Four Barrel coffee. The Note 9 detected food and optimized photo settings accordingly while leaving the color temperature of the plate and wood table more neutral. The resulting photo has nice golden colors in the pie crust and in the foam of the cappuccino. The Note 9 nails the white balance here.

The iPhone XS Max brings out the highlights in the hand pie but makes it look almost orange, Notice how everything, the food, the plate and table, have a warm tone, Interesting discovery: The iPhone XS Max I was using was gold, and when outdoors, the glass back acted as a mini gold light reflector, One of the most underrated features on both phones is the optical zoom moshi vesta iphone x textile pattern case - bahama blue reviews which allows you to get two times closer to your subject without degrading the image, The pictures below were taken late morning of this sky blue colored building in the Mission, The iPhone XS Max does a fantastic job with the colors and exposing the details in the shadows, The Note 9 has more contrast, but still looks pretty great..

However, once you start using digital zoom, photos from both phones look more sloppy. Here's a photo taken with 10x digital zoom on the iPhone XS Max and one from the Note 9 focusing in on the Salesforce Tower. Both look pretty rough though the iPhone XS Max has a smattering more color saturation. One of the coolest features on these phones is portrait mode.. or "live focus," as Samsung calls it. On the iPhone, portrait mode is superb. Not only can I change the lighting looks on people's faces but also the amount of background blur after a photo is taken. Like previous Samsung phones, the Note 9 also lets you change background blur both before and after a photo is taken, but the iPhone renders it more pleasing.

Portrait photos from the iPhone also have more detail and sharpness in people's faces and colors are more saturated than the ones from the Note 9, which genuinely look softer even with beauty mode turned all the way down -- though some people might prefer that look, Notice in the photos below, how much the Note 9 crops in, I was standing in the same place when I took both photos, When it comes to low light, the Note 9 switches to its f1.5 aperture -- the widest on any phone -- and exposes scenes brighter than the iPhone XS Max, Note 9 low-light photos definitely have less noise than the moshi vesta iphone x textile pattern case - bahama blue reviews iPhone XS Max, but images are really soft and suffer from blown highlights and motion blur..

Low-light photos from the iPhone XS Max have more noise but are sharper and hold highlights better. Unless I'm taking photos of something static, I almost always prefer low-light shots from the iPhone XS Max over the Note 9. Both these phones are two of the best for capturing video. However, the iPhone XS Max has better image quality, colors and can record video in 4K resolution at 24fps. The Note 9 records excellent videos but sometimes they can look over-sharpened. Watch the video that accompanies this article to see footage recorded with both phones.

Low-light video from the Note 9 looks soft and has lots of noise, while footage recorded at the same time with the iPhone XS Max looks decent, That's because of a new feature called Auto Low Light moshi vesta iphone x textile pattern case - bahama blue reviews FPS, which automatically changes the frame rate in low-light conditions from 30 frames per second to 24 to improve the image quality, By changing the frame rate (and possibly the shutter speed) the iPhone XS Max is able to expose each frame a tad longer, While the difference isn't night and day there were improvements when it came to color saturation and the amount of image noise..



Recent Posts