Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Apple
  4. Mobile
  5. Photography
  6. News

Apple shows off new photography features coming to iOS 11

Add as a preferred source on Google
Promotional logo for WWDC 2023.
This story is part of our complete Apple WWDC coverage

For iPhone users, photography has long been a central part of the mobile experience. In fact, iOS users now take over one trillion photos per year, according to Apple. So it comes as no surprise that at the 2017 Worldwide Developer Conference (WWDC), Apple announced several new photography-related features coming to iOS 11.

One of the more unique features that’s been in iOS for a couple of generations now is Live Photos. A Live Photo is essentially a short video, capturing more of the moment than a single frame. With iOS 11, Live Photos will become significantly more flexible, potentially changing how iPhone owners use them. Users will be able to select a new keyframe from anywhere within the Live Photo, which could be incredibly helpful for shooting things like sports, pets, or kids. Additionally, iOS 11 users can trim the length of the Live Photo to change the total duration, or save it as an autoplaying video loop or a Boomerang-style “bounce.” It will also be possible to save long exposure photos similar to shooting with a slow shutter speed on a DSLR camera.

Recommended Videos

Apple also promises more creative control over the look of iPhone photos thanks to new professional-quality filters built into the camera app. Users can select a filter for a variety of effects, from making skin tones more natural to applying classic looks to portraits.

When it comes to viewing your photos and videos, iOS 11 also includes a revamped Memories feature. Currently, the auto-generated slideshows that appear in Memories are formatted to be viewed in landscape orientation only, with any portrait-orientation content displaying in a cropped or downscaled format. With iOS 11, playing back Memories slideshows will automatically adjust to fill the screen regardless of how you hold your device, which should make for a more natural and better-looking experience.

Additionally, developers will soon be able to take advantage of the dual-camera Portrait mode on the iPhone 7 Plus with a new Depth API. Third-party apps will be able to implement the same depth-sensing capabilities that Apple uses in the default iOS camera app to simulate a shallow depth of field.

IOS 11 also introduces some under-the-hood technology updates that will help optimize a device’s storage and data usage. Apple is moving from standard JPEG compression for its still images to a new file format it’s calling HEIF, for High Efficiency Image Format. Apple claims HEIF offers twice the compression effectiveness  of JPEG but will still be fully shareable, which saves space on a user’s device and iCloud storage, shortens the time it takes to share an image, and uses less data when doing so.

Video files will receive a similar treatment, thanks to the new HEVC codec. This is especially important given the high-resolution 4K videos that iPhones now shoot, and could potentially save a lot of storage space for users who shoot video frequently.

A developer preview of iOS 11 is available today, with the public release planned for sometime in fall 2017.

Updated June 5, 2017 to include additional details from Apple’s iOS 11 preview page.

Daven Mathies
Daven is a contributing writer to the photography section. He has been with Digital Trends since 2016 and has been writing…
WhatsApp Plus is here, and you can safely ignore this subscription
WhatsApp wants a monthly fee for what other apps include by default, and that's a problem Meta can't dress up with custom icons.
WhatsApp Plus screenshots.

WhatsApp has fiercely defended its status as a free, no-nonsense online messaging app for over a decade, but a new subscription tier is muddying the waters. 

Meta is rolling out WhatsApp Plus, a paid subscription model, to a limited number of iPhone users using the latest version of the App Store. 

Read more
Apple and Google just put a lock on your green-bubble texts, and it’s about time
The green bubble finally has something to brag about. Apple and Google's unlikely alliance brings real encryption to everyday cross-platform texting.
E2EE arrives on RCS for iPhone and Android phones.

For years, texting between an iPhone and an Android device felt less like a private conversation and more like shouting across a crowded street. Well, that changes on May 11, 2026, as Apple and Google jointly launched end-to-end encryption (E2EE) for RCS messaging. 

The long-awaited feature is rolling out first in beta with iOS 26.5 (also announced today) and the latest version of Google Messages. 

Read more
The Razr Ultra 2026 is everything a flip phone should be, but I’m not paying $1,500 for it
A flip phone was never supposed to cost this much. At $1,500, the Razr Ultra finds itself in an uncomfortable fight against everything else your money can buy.
Motorola Razr Ultra

I'll be blunt: $1,500 is a lot of money to spend on the Razr Ultra, a clamshell phone that folds in half. In fact, it's a lot of money to spend on any smartphone, especially when a Galaxy S26 Ultra or iPhone 17 Pro Max costs less and still leaves a few hundred dollars in your pocket, or throwing in a couple of hundred bucks can get you a full-fledged book-style foldable. 

For me, the Razr Ultra doesn't quite make a strong case at $1,500. In isolation, it's a genuinely impressive flip phone that gets all the basics right and delivers the premium experience you'd expect at this price. The Alcantara back, the 5,000-nit display, the silicon-carbon battery, and the dual cameras on the back make it sound like a complete package.

Read more