The camera's settings offer control of things like video resolution, grid lines, location data, and there's an experimental option for recording video in HDR+. In most modes, you can select a different aspect ratio, toggle motion photos, and the magic wand button lets you apply filters or beauty correction. The top row offers different options depending on the shooting mode. You can swipe left and right to switch between shooting modes and swiping vertically will switch between the selfie camera and the main shooter. The camera app looks like that of other Samsung smartphones with One UI 2.0. Otherwise, the Camera app will automatically switch to the slightly wider view when it detects more faces are going to be in a selfie. If you switch to the wide view, this is when you'll get the advertised 10MP images. By default, the selfie camera crops in a little bit. There is also a bright LED flash, and the cover display becomes a viewfinder for selfies with the main camera - more on that in a bit.Īround the front is a 10MP selfie camera with f/2.4 aperture. The secondary camera is an ultra-wide with f2.2 aperture and 1.12-micron pixels. The main one has an f/1.8 aperture lens, 1.4-micron pixels, Dual Pixel autofocus, and optical image stabilization.
The 12MP main camera has the same sensor and pixel size like the S10, but remember that the Galaxy S10 had a switching aperture while the Z Flip does not.įor the Z Flip, Samsung went with dual 12MP cameras. The form factor has imposed additional size constraints on the space available to fit the camera, so the camera hardware on the Z Flip is closer to the Samsung Galaxy S10's rather than S20's. Although the Galaxy Z Flip starts a new lineup of flagships, the camera hardware sees a couple of compromises compared to Samsung's Galaxy S flagships.