What camera settings made this photo? Upload an image for AI analysis of estimated aperture, shutter, ISO, lighting, and post-processing.
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Technical Details is an AI analysis tool that examines photographs to identify and estimate camera settings, lighting setups, composition techniques, and post-processing effects. The tool helps photographers understand the technical aspects of how images were created, providing insights into aperture, shutter speed, ISO settings, focal length, lighting conditions, and editing techniques. Technical analysis requires understanding photography principles - how camera settings affect exposure and depth of field, how lighting creates mood and detail, how composition guides the eye, and how post-processing enhances or transforms images. This tool combines knowledge of photography techniques, camera technology, lighting principles, and image processing to provide detailed technical evaluation. It can analyze everything from natural light portraits to studio product photography, from landscape photography to architectural shots, helping you understand the technical choices that create specific visual effects and learn how to achieve similar results in your own photography.
Upload a photograph and the AI examines technical aspects including camera settings estimation (analyzing depth of field, motion blur, and noise to estimate aperture, shutter speed, and ISO), lighting analysis (evaluating light quality, direction, color temperature, and identifying lighting setups - natural, studio, flash, etc.), composition techniques (identifying compositional principles used like rule of thirds, leading lines, framing, and symmetry), focal length estimation (analyzing perspective and field of view to estimate focal length used), post-processing effects (identifying editing techniques like color grading, contrast adjustments, sharpening, and special effects), and equipment suggestions (recommending camera settings, lenses, and lighting equipment that could achieve similar results). The analysis provides detailed explanations of technical choices, explains how settings create specific effects, suggests how to replicate the look, and offers recommendations for achieving similar results. The tool explains photography principles in accessible terms, helping both beginners and experienced photographers understand technical aspects of image creation.
Upload the photo and the analysis estimates the recipe: likely aperture from depth of field, shutter speed from motion rendering, ISO from noise character, and approximate focal length from perspective compression. It also reads the lighting setup and any visible post-processing, so you get the how behind the image, not just a description.
It infers them from visual evidence rather than reading them off the file. Razor-thin focus implies a wide aperture; crisp motion implies a fast shutter; clean shadows imply low ISO. The estimates land in plausible ranges rather than exact values, which is precisely what you need to replicate the look.
Good enough to learn from, not forensic. Several setting combinations can produce near-identical results, and heavy editing, AI enhancement, or smartphone computational photography can mask the original capture choices entirely. Compressed or downscaled images hide noise and fine blur cues, so estimates from full-resolution uploads are noticeably more trustworthy.
Yes, lighting analysis is often the most useful part: direction, hardness, and color of the key light, whether fill or rim lights are present, and whether it reads as natural window light, on-camera flash, or a studio setup. Shadow edges and catchlights in the eyes give most of this away.
It identifies the visible signatures: color grading style, lifted blacks, aggressive sharpening or noise reduction, skin retouching, vignetting, HDR tone mapping. It will not produce the exact edit history, but it tells you which categories of adjustment shaped the final look so you can recreate the treatment in your own editor.
It is basically reverse-engineering practice. Run photos you admire through it, study the estimated settings and lighting reads, then go reproduce the recipe with your own camera. Connecting a look you love to the specific aperture, shutter, and light direction that created it teaches faster than memorizing exposure theory.
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