
"Your Pixel's camera sensor is physically shaped in a 4:3 ratio. When shooting in 16:9, the camera is cropping off the top and bottom of the image before the shutter is even pressed. You're permanently throwing away vertical resolution. Switching to 4:3 means keeping everything the sensor is seeing. You can always crop to 16:9 afterward if you are going for that cinematic look, but you can't add back data that was never captured in the first place."
"The Display P3 color space captures more color information than the older sRGB standard, particularly in the reds and greens. More color information means more vibrant images, and that means more flexibility when editing later. There's really no downside to just leaving this setting on. Go to Settings > More Settings > Rich color in photos and toggle it on. Your Pixel will now capture pictures with a wider color gamut, a"
Optimize Pixel 10 Pro image quality by changing specific camera settings. Use the Full Image (4:3) ratio to capture the sensor's full vertical resolution and avoid permanent cropping from 16:9. Crop to 16:9 later for a cinematic look without losing captured data. Enable Rich Color to use the Display P3 color space for wider reds and greens, producing more vibrant images and greater editing flexibility. Access Rich Color via Settings > More Settings > Rich color in photos. Some recommended settings apply across recent Pixel models; others are exclusive to the Pro lineup.
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