If you’re wondering about the filming potential of the new iPhone 6s, you don’t need to ask any more questions. Not long ago Apple’s new smartphone was released, but we already have several trial videos and mainly a short film, filmed entirely on the new iPhone 6s.
Since the iPhone 6s hit the mainstream in mid-September, we’ve wondered how its new 4K camera compares to its predecessors. Lisa Bettany, co-founder of Camera +, put together a comprehensive list with a comparison of all versions of the iPhone. This detailed list is a side-by-side comparison, putting you through a number of different tests including macro, backlight, light, portrait, and sunset shots, to name just a few types of tests. If you haven’t seen these comparisons, I suggest that you do so asap.
- However.
- Despite the abundance of videos that have emerged to test the 4K video of the new iPhone 6s.
- The journalists that make up Ryot were the first to make a short film in 4K using only the iPhone 6s.
- Revealing in the process how much a iPhone.
- Tool 6s can be.
- Want to see 4K video quality on the new iPhone 6S camera? Check out the aforementioned short film.
- Which was released this week by the Ryot media company.
- Titled “The Painter of Jalouzi.
- ” the video is the world’s first short film.
- Shot in 4K on the new iPhone 6S Plus.
Can you watch the video? Jalouzi’s painter? (free translation) at this link here.
Well, although the iPhone 6s is capable of producing excellent images with its own applications and elements, the RYOT collective, like many other smartphone manufacturers, uses special tools to make the smartphone more powerful. RYOT used an MCAM device that allowed them to mount high-end camera lenses, an ikan handheld stabilizer, and a DJI Phantom to capture these beautiful images. The filmmakers detailed their behind-the-scenes BTS process here.
There is no question that filmmakers are beginning to realize that different types of movies can be made well with smartphones. Tangerine, a film by director Sean Baker, was shot entirely on an iPhone 5s. The Swiss TV channel The Swiss TV channel Léman Bleu has abolished the use of traditional TV cameras and now films everything entirely with an iPhone 6. Although these smartphones have significant limitations in terms of images in cinema, we cannot deny that smartphones are incredibly powerful tools, and now it’s exciting to see what filmmakers can do using them to the last drop.
Ryot co-founder David Darg said in an interview that his team acquired Apple phones a few weeks ago. Ryot used the phone cases that allowed them to shoot with high-end camera lenses. They then set out to tell the story of a citizen of Jalouzi, one of Haiti’s largest slums, whose personal mission is to bring a touch of color.
He literally wants to paint the whole city
? Believing that color has the power to transform your community, does it help you paint everywhere? in houses, in buses and on the entire slope,? says the description of the movie. “Armed with brushes of vivid blues, pastel pinks and sunny yellows, it helps mobilize citizens of all ages determined to transform the gray city into a colorful rainbow to pave the way to a brighter Haiti.