r/pixelography

So what are the limitations of the pixel 8, 9, 10 pro compared to each other, and compared to professional cameras?

i have the 8 pro. love the camera. i notice that when I blow things up and print, edges can become jagged. i assume this is due to the sensor size and maybe is also due to the ai rendering. on phone screens and even on laptop screens it always seems to look like crunchy and jagged than when I print. I've also owned professional Nikon cameras and and Fujifilm apsc cameras and I understand that having a dedicated button for white balance, photometry, exposure compensation, and an EVF to frame with a nice crispy contrasty image in the eye hole can all be valuable as compared to the phones.

what about image quality between pixel generations? had the 9 or 10 pro models improved on the jagged edge that I get when I print 5x7? I'm curious about the community's thoughts.

u/str8losing — 2 days ago
▲ 261 r/pixelography+1 crossposts

Weirdly Foggy Day

It was rather a normal day until a cloudless cold front swooped in and we got this fog + late day sun combo. I managed a smartphone shot.

u/nisahnet — 4 days ago

Shot On Pixel 6A. [Un-Edited]

Still a good and capable camera phone. Although I've heard a couple of stories about pixel ruining their cameras with the latest updates, but it seems fine to me. (All of them are shot on 2X zoom)

u/Right_Excitement6371 — 4 days ago