Anyone had this happen with an iPhone camera (it looks like glare from sunlight, but there isn’t any)?
Is it just this photo or is it happening on them all? Is it the same person taking them? Let someone else have a go.
It's happening on all of them and it just started suddenly on Saturday, I'd taken over 30 images for my website on Saturday morning without any problem, then I tried to rattle off a load of quick images to send someone and they all came out like the above.
My line of thought was it’s picked up a reflective light source from somewhere. Going by how I use mine it could be a ring on the index finger? Does it do it on “Selfie” mode?
Looks like the bonding between the camera lens and the flash is not secure. Looks like you getting some light bleed through the camera lens casing somehow. I have come across something like this before but not on iPhone, a cheap Chinese phone i use while away on business.
Turn it off then on again, failing that what sir really needs is the latest model, yours is so old it's obsolete. Technical support by... well everyone these days.
Just checked and no it doesn't, but if I take all the photos with me wearing the gear, I won't sell anything.
'They're so hot, they'll literally explode in your trouser pocket! Seriously folks this thing is a TICKING TIME BOMB"
Too true. I left mine on charge and it got so hot it is now bent like a banana. Though, in fairness, I know someone who had the same problem with an i phone.
Cunning way to advertise a jacket by pretending there is a camera problem? No idea on the camera...but the jacket is nice
Turn the flash off and photo in natural light, which would give a better representation of the jacket anyway. Jacket does look good.
I'm not using a flash, they're all just coming out like than in natural light. I've now just sent the **** images, but with an accompanying 'sorry the images are ****' message. Job done.
Is it always roughly the same percentage of the image? If so, could you not take a picture from further back, so the 'flash' isn't over the target image, and then crop it?