{"id":86394,"date":"2022-10-04T06:24:00","date_gmt":"2022-10-04T06:24:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/harchi90.com\/iphone-14-pros-cameras-vs-13-pro-yes-theres-a-difference\/"},"modified":"2022-10-04T06:24:00","modified_gmt":"2022-10-04T06:24:00","slug":"iphone-14-pros-cameras-vs-13-pro-yes-theres-a-difference","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/harchi90.com\/iphone-14-pros-cameras-vs-13-pro-yes-theres-a-difference\/","title":{"rendered":"iPhone 14 Pro’s Cameras vs. 13 Pro: Yes, There’s A Difference"},"content":{"rendered":"
\n
This story is part of Focal Point iPhone 2022<\/span>CNET’s collection of news, tips and advice around Apple’s most popular product. <\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
The iPhone 14 Pro has several improvements to its camera system that have led to stellar reviews, including a 48-megapixel sensor and Apple’s new image-processing technique called the Photonic Engine. This immediately puts the iPhone 14 Pro at an advantage over last year’s iPhone 13 Pro and 13 Pro Max<\/span>at least on paper. <\/p>\n
But how big of a difference do these new hardware and software features actually make in the real world? <\/p>\n
I compared the cameras on both phones in a range of challenging situations around San Francisco to find out. All these photos were taken in the default camera app on the iPhone 14 Pro and iPhone 13 Pro, both running the latest version of iOS 16. <\/p>\n
You can find out more about the specific improvements to the iPhone 14 Pro’s camera system in this deep dive by my colleague Stephen Shankland. CNET’s Patrick Holland also has a great analysis into the iPhone 14 Pro’s photos and how the Photonic Engine helps boost photo quality in challenging lighting conditions.<\/p>\n
The iPhone 14 Pro 48-megapixel sensor captures more detail<\/h2>\n
On the hardware front, the biggest change between the two phones is the 14 Pro’s new 48-megapixel sensor on the main wide camera that’s also physically larger than the older iPhone, which makes just as much of a difference to photo quality as the increase in megapixels. The 13 Pro uses a 12-megapixel sensor.<\/p>\n
Using a technique called pixel binning, the iPhone 14 Pro joins four pixels together into groups to capture 12-megapixel photos with more detail. You can also take a full 48-megapixel image if you shoot in Apple’s ProRaw format, and that gives photographers more flexibility when it comes to editing and recovering shadow and highlight detail among many other advantages.<\/p>\n
In good lighting, the 12-megapixel shots from both the iPhone 14 Pro and iPhone 13 Pro look similar at reduced magnification, and it might not be that easy to spot the difference. It’s when you push in a bit that the advantages of the 14 Pro’s new sensor and image processing become clear.<\/p>\n
In the images below that I captured in San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park, the tree trunks are more defined and sharper on the iPhone 14 Pro’s photo than those on the 13 Pro. Areas of fine detail, like grass, also retain much more resolution. You can click through to the full resolution image from the iPhone 14 Pro and the iPhone 13 Pro to compare more easily.<\/p>\n
The iPhone 14 Pro’s lens on the main rear camera also has a wider field of view than the 13 Pro’s: 24mm versus 26mm. This means you can get a little more in your shot, which might be especially helpful for landscape photography.<\/p>\n
The iPhone 14 Pro can take photos at 2x zoom<\/h2>\n
The iPhone 14 Pro also has another trick up its sleeve: The 48-megapixel sensor can also take 12-megapixel shots at an effective 2x optical zoom. You’ll see a new 2x option in the camera interface. That crops the center of the higher-resolution image to immediately give you more flexibility with focal length, without needing a fourth lens. The iPhone 13 Pro can also take photos at 2x zoom, but it uses digital zoom and doesn’t have the same quality or level of detail as this new technique.<\/p>\n
I find the new 2x option on the iPhone 14 Pro helps with portrait mode. Instead of just offering 1x and 3x options like on the older phone, it can also snap portrait mode photos at 2x. This results in more natural-looking shots to my eye. I find it’s more flattering on facial features than the wide look from 1x, or the zoomed-in perspective at 3x.<\/p>\n