for iOS 5.0 software
Table Of Contents
- iPhone User Guide
- Contents
- Chapter 1: iPhone at a Glance
- Chapter 2: Getting Started
- Chapter 3: Basics
- Chapter 4: Siri
- Chapter 5: Phone
- Chapter 6: Mail
- Chapter 7: Safari
- Chapter 8: Music
- Chapter 9: Messages
- Chapter 10: Calendar
- Chapter 11: Photos
- Chapter 12: Camera
- Chapter 13: YouTube
- Chapter 14: Stocks
- Chapter 15: Maps
- Chapter 16: Weather
- Chapter 17: Notes
- Chapter 18: Clock
- Chapter 19: Reminders
- Chapter 20: Game Center
- Chapter 21: iTunes Store
- Chapter 22: Newsstand
- Chapter 23: App Store
- Chapter 24: Contacts
- Chapter 25: Videos
- Chapter 26: Calculator
- Chapter 27: Compass
- Chapter 28: Voice Memos
- Chapter 29: Nike + iPod
- Chapter 30: iBooks
- Chapter 31: Accessibility
- Universal Access features
- VoiceOver
- Routing the audio of incoming calls
- Siri
- Triple-Click Home
- Zoom
- Large Text
- White on Black
- Speak Selection
- Speak Auto-text
- Mono Audio
- Hearing aid compatibility
- Custom Vibrations
- LED Flash for Alerts
- AssistiveTouch
- Universal Access in Mac OS X
- TTY support
- Minimum font size for mail messages
- Assignable ringtones
- Visual voicemail
- Widescreen keyboards
- Large phone keypad
- Voice Control
- Closed captioning
- Chapter 32: Settings
- Appendix A: International Keyboards
- Appendix B: Support and Other Information
- iPhone Support site
- Restarting or resetting iPhone
- Backing up iPhone
- Updating and restoring iPhone software
- File sharing
- Safety, software, and service information
- Using iPhone in an enterprise environment
- Using iPhone with other carriers
- Disposal and recycling information
- Apple and the environment
- iPhone operating temperature
Viewing, sharing, and printing
The photos and videos you take with Camera are saved in your Camera Roll album.
View your Camera Roll album: Flick left-to-right, or tap the thumbnail image in the lower-left
corner of the screen. You can also view your Camera Roll album in the Photos app.
To take more photos or videos, tap .
If you have iCloud Photo Stream turned on in Settings > iCloud, new photos also appear in your
Photo Stream album and are streamed to your other iOS devices and computers. See “iCloud” on
page 17.
For more information about viewing and sharing photos and videos, see “Sharing photos and
videos” on page 73 and “Uploading photos and videos to your computer” on page 78.
Show or hide the controls while
viewing a full-screen photo or
video
Tap the screen.
Email or text a photo or video Tap
.
Tweet a photo View the photo in full screen, tap , then tap Tweet. You must be logged
in to your Twitter account. Go to Settings > Twitter.
To include your location, tap Add Location.
Print a photo Tap
. See “Printing” on page 27.
Delete a photo or video Tap
.
Editing photos
You can rotate, enhance, remove red-eye, and crop photos. Enhancing improves a photo’s overall
darkness or lightness, color saturation, and other qualities.
Rotate
Auto enhance
Removered-eye
Crop
Edit a photo: While viewing a photo in full screen, tap Edit, then choose a tool.
With the red-eye tool, tap each eye to correct it. To crop, drag the corners of the grid, drag the
photo to reposition it, then tap Crop. You can also tap Constrain when cropping, to set a specic
ratio.
Trimming videos
You can trim the frames from the beginning and end of a video that you just recorded, or from
any other video in your Camera Roll album. You can replace the original video, or save the
trimmed version as a new video clip.
Trim a video: While viewing a video, tap the screen to display the controls. Drag either end of the
frame viewer at the top of the video, then tap Trim.
Important: If you choose Trim Original, the trimmed frames are permanently deleted from the
original video. If you choose “Save as New Clip,” a new trimmed video clip is saved in your Camera
Roll album and the original video is unaected.
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Chapter 12 Camera