Huawei’s P20 Pro takes even better night pictures than the Pixel 2 XL
Huawei’s night mode is spectacular.
Roughly half of Huawei’s P20 Pro launch event this week
was dedicated to the new device’s camera capabilities, reflecting the
great deal of time and attention the company has dedicated to mobile
photography. And the results, now that I’ve had a few days to try out
the P20 Pro, aren’t far off from the lofty hype. Huawei has crafted a
formidable contender for the crown of best smartphone camera. I’m not
yet convinced that it deserves that accolade, but I can say with
certainty that the P20 Pro’s night mode is a groundbreaking innovation
that produces some of the best night shots ever taken with a phone. Even
the lauded Google Pixel 2 XL struggles to keep up with the P20 Pro.
Touring around the city of Paris, the venue of Huawei’s
P20 announcement, I shot a bunch of casual photos with the Pixel 2 XL
and the P20 Pro. Below you’ll find a selection of the most notable ones,
starting off with the most challenging situation: nighttime
photography.
The way Huawei’s night mode works is a technical marvel.
The camera’s shutter is open for a full four seconds — during which time
I get to see the image exposure steadily rising until night scenes
start to resemble daytime — and then all the information gathered is
intelligently used to render a clean and sharp image. I expected the
results from this process to turn out soft and blurry, but in the above
pair of photos, you can see the Huawei phone outdid the Pixel. With the
P20, you can still discern tree branches in the background, there’s more
color (and a lot less graininess) in the sky, and just better saturation throughout the frame.
Another example where the P20 Pro offers better
saturation and a much cleaner night sky than the Pixel 2 XL. The Total
logo and the background buildings are much more defined in the Huawei
shot. That does come at a price, though, as Huawei isn’t shy about
throwing in extra layers of sharpening and noise-reducing blur to make
an image pop more. So you lose some of the naturalness of the Pixel
photo, but you gain a crisper picture for sharing across mobile devices
where pixel-level detail isn’t that crucial. The notable thing about
this capture is that the gent in the P20 Pro foreground kept walking
throughout the four seconds of capture — Huawei’s algorithms are clever
enough to account for such moving objects and keep them reasonably fixed
in place.
These are both amazingly good photos, given the scant
amount of light available for the cameras to work with. Huawei once
again wins the comparison by presenting a beautifully noise-free sky,
judging the exposure better, and giving a more faithful representation
of the reflective surface of the pyramid.
This is the scene that I just can’t get over. The P20 Pro
sky is a freaking masterpiece compared to the Pixel 2 XL sky, which
serves as a good example of the trouble most phones have with nighttime
photography. Not only is the Pixel blotchy and ugly, it also blows out
the luminous signs on the buildings. Then again, it does retain enough
sharpness for the “hauts de seine” sign on the right side to remain
readable — whereas the P20 Pro’s aggressive noise reduction destroys
that along with plenty of small details in the frame. Ultimately,
though, for the most common goal of casual tourist snaps, Huawei’s
solution is just going to produce more pleasing results for its user.
Zoom in real close on this one, and you will rightly
declare the Google Pixel 2 XL the winner for its higher degree of detail
preservation. The people in that photo still look human, whereas in the
Huawei shot, they look like they were painted on with a thick brush.
But it’s not a total Google victory because the P20 Pro does a better
job of accurately exposing the red bar sign and the street light at the
top of the frame. The Huawei photo also has a more saturated look, with
the red reflections in the foreground catching the eye more readily than
those in Google’s image.
Distinguishing between these two in good light would be
impossible, except for one thing: Huawei’s Master AI processing. It
auto-detects the sort of scene you’re trying to capture and aggressively
processes the photo to pretty it up. In the above example, the P20 Pro
caught a sniff of blue sky and decided to double down on that at the
expense of foreground exposure. You can see how problematic that becomes
when shooting the Eiffel Tower, especially because Huawei doesn’t offer
the option to remove its processing for a more natural look. So you’ll
have to be careful about letting the AI make all the decisions.
For the most part, Huawei’s AI-assisted image alterations
are for the better. Here’s an example where the P20 Pro camera detected
the scene as “greenery” and boosted contrast and saturation
accordingly. I can’t say that this is the most realistic shot ever
taken, as the leaves before me were not quite as lush as the Huawei
phone presents, but it’s undeniably a pleasing, clean, and extremely
sharp capture. The Pixel 2 XL shot looks flat and lifeless by
comparison.
Comments
Post a Comment