Camera - Low Light Evaluation

Low-light capture on the iPhone 12’s should be improved for two reasons: First of all, the new f/1.6 lens of the main camera should allow for 27% better light capture compared to the f/1.8 unit of the iPhone 11’s. Secondly, Apple with this generation has finally addressed the lack of Night Mode on the ultra-wide and telephoto modules, resolving a quite huge handicap that was present on the iPhone 11 generation of devices.

Click for full image
[ iPhone 12 Pro ]
[ iPhone 11 Pro ]
[ Note20 Ultra (S) ]
[ S20+ (E) ]
[ Pixel 5 ] [ X-T30 ]

In this first scene, the results are actually a bit disappointing as we’re seeing almost no differences between the 12 Pro and the 11 Pro. The new phone uses half the exposure time according to the EXIF data, but has to use a higher ISO level to compensate. The only thing that’s noticeably better on the 12 Pro is the improved lens flare produced by the street light.

In general Apple’s Night Mode still doesn’t look to be as competitive as Google’s or Samsung’s implementation, as the S20, Note20 Ultra and the Pixel 5 perform quite better here.

On the ultra-wide angle, the inclusion of Night Mode now turns this camera module from something unusable to rather passable results. It’s a huge upgrade compared to the iPhone 11 series, but still lags behind the Pixel phone as far behind Samsung’s implementation.

Click for full image
[ iPhone 12 Pro ]
[ iPhone 11 Pro ]
[ Note20 Ultra (S) ]
[ S20+ (E) ]
[ Pixel 5 ] [ X-T30 ]

Night mode being fully automatically triggered on the iPhone’s camera, means there’s no way to force it on when there’s too much light, such as in this scene – which is really odd given that it did trigger on the iPhone 11 Pro, thus producing an overall better result than the 12 Pro.

The UWA again gains massive usability with the addition of Night Mode, although all the phones here produce quite bad results for a variety of different reasons.

Click for full image
[ iPhone 12 Pro ]
[ iPhone 11 Pro ]
[ Note20 Ultra (S) ]
[ S20+ (E) ]
[ Pixel 5 ] [ X-T30 ]

Here, the 12 Pro uses the larger aperture optics to reduce the ISO from 800 to 640. There’s a slight change in colours, but overall I wouldn’t say that it’s something that would be immediately noticeable between the two generation of phones.

Click for full image
[ iPhone 12 Pro ]
[ iPhone 11 Pro ]
[ Note20 Ultra (S) ]
[ S20+ (E) ]
[ Pixel 5 ] [ X-T30 ]

This scene was a bit odd for the two iPhones as they both showcased identical exposure times as well as ISO levels, although the iPhone 12 Pro shot is brighter due to the larger aperture. The phone didn’t trigger Night Mode for this shot as it was too bright.

Night Mode for the UWA is a large jump for the iPhone 12, but it can’t compete against the Samsung devices or the Pixel phone, although the latter got the colour temperature completely wrong.

Click for full image
[ iPhone 12 Pro ] [ iPhone 11 Pro ]
[ Note20 Ultra (S) ] [ S20+ (E) ]
[ Pixel 5 ] [ X-T30 ]

Here again the iPhone 12 Pro uses the larger aperture in order to reduce the ISO levels of the shot, which is a bit odd given that I feel that the iPhone 11 Pro had the sharper and less noisy shot. There’s also a change in colour temperature although saying which is better is subjective.

Click for full image
[ iPhone 12 Pro ] [ iPhone 11 Pro ]
[ Note20 Ultra (S) ] [ S20+ (E) ]
[ Pixel 5 ] [ X-T30 ]

Finally, in an extreme low-light shot I’m simply challenging the light capture abilities of the cameras here. This scene was extremely dark and the first sample shot of the Fuji is likely better representation of the scene as experienced in-person, while the EV+2 shot is closer to the exposure the phones are trying to achieve.

Neither of the phones are faring well here, and the iPhone 12 Pro does change a bit of the tone-mapping compared to the iPhone 11 Pro, faring a bit better, although I feel the Samsung phones are producing a more natural look.

Low-Light Conclusion: Improved, but not Competitive

In general, I feel that Apple may have overpromised a bit on the part of the low-light capture ability of these new phones. While we do notice the larger aperture optics of the new modules in the resulting captures, Apple doesn’t seem to have substantially changed their Night Mode processing this year as sometimes it’s very hard to distinguish the iPhone 12 from the iPhone 11 results.

On the ultra-wide angle, the new Night Mode options obviously transforms previously unusable results into something that’s more passable. I feel that this shouldn’t be taken as praise versus Apple finally addressing a huge feature lack in the iPhone 11 series, as they were the only devices on the market actually lacking this functionality on the ultra-wide modules.

Although the results have improved, Apple here still largely lags behind the competition which sports better hardware, and also has been able to iterate on their computational photography modes over the past year.

It’s a pity that Apple chose to only employ a larger improved camera sensor on the iPhone 12 Pro Max, creating model differentiation on the cameras that previously didn’t exist – I would have had at least wished the 12 Pro to also house this improved sensor, if possible.

Camera - Daylight Evaluation Video Recording
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  • Ranger1065 - Wednesday, December 2, 2020 - link

    I understand some members of your staff have problems, but this is ridiculous. In the interests of self preservation, isn't it time to get a GPU review done?
  • 29a - Wednesday, December 2, 2020 - link

    Let me guess, no 3060 ti review?
  • zeeBomb - Thursday, December 3, 2020 - link

    that's tough!!!
  • Frantisek - Friday, December 4, 2020 - link

    Phones looks simmilar. Difference is much bigger then you picture even it does not look like that in normal use. Let see all differences.

    128 GB so real difference is 150 (130) USD
    6 GB RAM
    Telephoto: ƒ/2.0 aperture with OIS
    2x optical zoom in, 2x optical zoom out; 4x optical zoom range
    Digital zoom up to 10x
    Lidar
    Night mode portraits enabled by LiDAR Scanner
    Apple ProRAW
    Dolby Vision recording up to 60 fps
    Durable steel frame you do not preffere
    Brighter display

    I think RAM, extra lens with OIS, Lidar and brighter screen can easily justify hugher cost.
    And 100 USD for Max is really small difference for bigger screen and battery, better image sensor with extra stabilisation when we speak in Apple prices.

    I hever had rounded phone so can not comment your feelings from flat edges. ... Sorry I had 3/3GS but it so long time ago and were quite bulky.
    I would try to compare those phones in cases as many ppl wear them anyway.
  • s.yu - Friday, December 4, 2020 - link

    Not exciting at all...Personally that move back to the iP4 design is the biggest "upgrade", as I've always felt that to be more premium, just like Razer etc. are all making their laptops more boxy. The camera would be more of a sidegrade.
  • sharathc - Friday, December 4, 2020 - link

    Boring 🙄
  • iphonebestgamephone - Sunday, December 6, 2020 - link

    More exciting than whatever you are doing, atleast.
  • gerard143 - Thursday, January 28, 2021 - link

    Outstanding review! Seriously, props to you for not being one of those Apple can do no wrong reviewers.

    You hit the nail on the head about the regression to square edges and the fingerprint magnet stainless steel.

    The sqaure edges are a massive step backwards. I hate my 12 pro because of it. The stainless looks like garbage and is heavy. I’d prefer alum and rounded edges. When I hold my XS in my hand again it feels amazing compared to the 12 pro.

    I feel your review was very accurate and well written. Great job!
  • mobilecampus - Monday, September 6, 2021 - link

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