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Iphone App That Can Make Your Face Look Thinner

I wish i was thinner?

I'm pretty curvy for my age, 14 years old 5'2 and 130 pounds. I wish i was more along the line of 100-110 pounds though. I really want to have a thin body, not too thin but to be one of those girls with small breasts and a thin face, flat stomach. My best friend is like this, and she eats so much. I was wondering if there is something i can do/ eat that will make my very slow metabolism faster? I always wish i was more petite and fragile, rather than average and uncomfortable with my body. ( I usually have a hard time flirting because I'm thicker than most guys, because guys have fast metabolisms. I just wish i was skinny, but I love food so much :(. How do i devote my self to stop eating so much and become thin? Any advice please.

Why does my face look thin in mobile camera video?

It is caused by perspective distortion from being up close to the camera.Typically smartphone cameras are a moderate wide angle (Typically around 28-32mm equivalent focal length). In order to get your face to fill the image up, you need the camera pretty close to your face.What happens here is the distance to the camera lens is, relatively speaking, much closer at the tip of your nose than it is at the side of your face.I don't have a personally convenient photo of a face, but here's someone else's example of this exact phenomenon:What Is the Best Lens/Focal Length For Portrait and Head Shot Photography? A typical smartphone rear camera will have a result in between the 35mm and 24mm focal lengths. Front cameras are typically a bit wider, and are probably closer to the 24mm picture.If you have the camera lens at the same distance from your face at all times, the other difference between the camera image and the mirror image that may throw off your perception is that the mirror image is reversed, so you're not used to seeing your face as others see it. To remove this factor, if you invert the camera image horizontally, it may look more proper to you.

Does the iPhone 8 front camera make your face look thinner?

Every front camera makes your face look “thinner”.This is because every front camera is a fairly wide angle lens. And you then stick this lens very close to your face when you take a picture of yourself with it.What this does is it exaggerates distances. Things that have depth look like they have more depth than they do.I'll link another answer I made that explains why this happens:Jeff Forbes's answer to Why do I look different in mirror selfies and regular selfies (that appear the same way as you do in the mirror)?

Is my iPhone camera an accurate representation of what I look like? It makes my head look big but my bathroom mirror makes my head look small.

The lens on a typical cell phone camera is wide-angle and something equivalent to a full frame 30 to 50mm lens on a traditional camera. (55–70mm would be a “normal” lens.”) So you are getting a bit of the fisheye effect. This article has a great shot of a guy with 3 different focal lengths and you can see the swollen head effect of the shorter focal length, like a cell phone camera. How To Find The Perfect Portrait Lens To Avoid Distortion

Do cameras make you look fatter? Why do I look fat in photo but slimmer in real life?

No, a camera doesn't specifically make you look fat. But it can actually make you different in a few different ways.The lens used on the camera will have an effect on the apparent perspective of the subject. A wide angle lend tends to elongate the subject. So that won't make you any wider. But if you head is further from the lens than your body in a shot, it'll exaggerate the relative size of your body, or anything close to the camera. If you have a bit of belly showing, that might look a bit stretched in a wide angle snot.Now here's the thing: most consumer cameras shoot wide angle. If you have a smartphone, the “normal” back or selfie camera will be an equivalent of about 24–30mm, basically that first shot. Those new dual cameras with “portrait” mode might go to an equivalent of around 50mm. If I was shooting a portrait, I'd probably go to 70–100mm at least.The second thing is that a camera is going to show you in ways you're not used to seeing yourself. Most of see our faces in the mirror every morning. A selfie camera can usually be set to give you a mirror shot, but regular cameras and everyone else sees you straight-on, not in mirror image. And cameras can photograph you from any angle, ways you will never see yourself. And sure, depending on lens, that can induce some perspective distortion.Or maybe… well, there's plenty of time to hit the gym before beach season. Advice I really hope to heed myself…. while I make every effort to stay behind my cameras and only be seen in mirrors…

Is there any good Android photo editing app that makes you look slim in the photo?

Photoshop is a station that we all photographers end up there by learning its details, and it turned up to be fun and much easier than we thought it is. You can start by working on Lightroom, this will give you a great idea about editing and you can continue on it, a lot of professionals work only on that application.As for Android, I don’t know, I prefer to working on RAW files that comes out of Digital Cameras. In the industry the only software that works on bodies is new in the market and called : “PortraitPro Body”Industry’s first whole-body editor shows a portrait is more than just a pretty faceI haven’t used “PortraitPro Body” , but it looks like OK for photographers that doesn't wish to spent a lot of time doing editing. there is trial version.. give it a try, or wait till they release the Android version. Best of Luck :)

Why does my face look fatter than it does in the mirror when I take a picture of myself on my iPhone?

It sounds like you’ve tried this:(1) Take a selfie with your iPhone’s rear-facing camera pointing towards you at out-stretched arm length (i.e. don’t use the front-facing camera normally used for selfies) and do so standing in front of a mirror so that you can look at your iPhone’s screen in the mirror to make sure you get the framing right.(2) Take a shot of yourself, again with the rear-facing camera, at the same distance from the mirror - an arm’s length - but with your phone held beside your face, shooting your image reflected in the mirror.The main difference between these two is that you’ve doubled the distance between the iPhone camera and your face. In (1) it’s just 1 arm’s length. In (2) it’s two arms lengths, because there’s the distance from your face to the mirror, then mirror back to your phone. I asked you to use your iPhone’s rear-facing camera for both tests, so that you’re comparing the optics & geometry of both shots the same.As you’ve observed, you look better in (2), because of the relative geometry of the two situations. In (1) your face is taking up more of the image, in (2) it’s taking up less. But it’s not just that - it’s also that things in the centre - like your nose and cheeks - appear larger than they are. It’s a ‘trick’ of perspective - in comparing the two scenarios, on (1) (closer up) the centre of your face is significantly closer to the camera than things further off to the sides, away from the centre of the image.iPhones have an effective focal-length of around 30mm if you scale their camera geometry up to DSLR-standard optics. That’s way too low in the world of portrait photography, because it leads to exactly what you’ve observed. Generally photographers use 85mm or longer focal-length lenses for portraiture, because it’s much better at capturing the true proportions of your face, without the distortions of close-ups.Some examples of the differences are shown here.

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