The Philips 9FF2M4 comes standard with a white frame along with three extra colored frames: red, silver, and black. This digital frame retails for around $250.
Black will always make the colors in a picture stand out more intensely.
The only color that I have found the r707 digital camera in is silver. While it has many picture color options it doesn't seem that the actual camera itself has any other color choices.
The PowerShot SD1200-IS has many color choices.
yes it does
her hair color is light brown. if u bring in a picture of her hair into a salon, they will tell you better choices.
digital picture frames can be distracting for the eye with their digital zooms and crossfading. digital frames are a big space saver and money saver, but they are small televisions and the movement and color changes can make the frame take center stage in the room instead of complimenting and decorating it.
The difference is the lens, auto-focus, color and sharpness / detail of the picture, but this only depends on the two cameras that you are comparing.
Your phone is creating a 'best fit' digital version of an analogue scene. Digital cameras lose some clarity because the software is limited by the number of colours it can create.
Digital images are created using image processing software.
You can actually see what you are taking a picture of. & If you don't like the picture you have taken, then you can go back and delete it. You can edit your pictures on some cameras. Remove redeye, change the color, brightness, etc.
Infrared photography was developed to give the consumer more choices for the type of picture produced from one image. With infrared, a picture can be in color, in distorted colors, or even in black and white, all from the same image.
I think it is where you can change it to black and white or sepia or vibrant. I had that on my camera. You can change it on the camera before you take the picture.