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August 5, 2025

The Secret to Perfect Group Photos is Already on Your Phone

A simple guide to using "Live Photos" and their Android equivalents to make sure everyone's eyes are open!

After last week’s poll, I’m going to move to publishing these three times a week, instead of each weekday. View previous newsletters anytime here:


We've all been there. You gather the whole family for a lovely group photo. You take what seems like the perfect shot, only to look at it later and discover that one person was blinking, another was looking away, and a third hadn't quite started smiling yet. It's a common frustration in our digital photo albums.

But what if you could magically go back in time, just a second or two, to capture the perfect moment from that same photo? The good news is, you probably can! Most modern smartphones have a brilliant feature designed to solve this exact problem. Today, we’ll demystify this tool and give you the simple, step-by-step instructions to rescue your pictures.

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Fixing Blinks and Missed Smiles: A Guide to Live Photos

What is a "Live Photo"?

You may have noticed that some of your photos seem to move for a moment when you look at them. This feature is called Live Photo on an iPhone, or often Motion Photo (on Samsung) or Top Shot (on Google Pixel) on Android phones.

  • How It Works: When this feature is turned on, your phone's camera doesn't just take a single, frozen picture. Instead, it secretly records a very short video clip—about 1.5 seconds before and 1.5 seconds after you press the shutter button.

  • Why It's So Useful: This short video clip contains dozens of individual still images, or "frames." It acts as a safety net, giving you the power to scroll through the entire moment and choose the single best frame where everyone is smiling with their eyes open. It’s like having a do-over for a perfectly timed shot!

Apple's new Live Photos feature turns your pictures into videos | The Verge

How to Turn This Feature On or Off

In your phone's main Camera app, look for an icon that is a series of concentric circles. On an iPhone, it's usually in the top-right corner. On an Android, it might be in the settings menu. If the icon has a slash through it, the feature is off. Tap it to turn it on, and your phone will start capturing these little moments.

How to Completely Turn Off Live Photo on iPhone Camera

The How-To Guide: Finding the Perfect Moment in Your Photo

Here is the simple, step-by-step process for editing a photo to choose the best frame.

For iPhone Users (Editing a Live Photo):

  1. Open your Photos app and find the Live Photo you want to edit.

  2. Tap "Edit" in the top-right corner.

  3. At the bottom of the screen, tap the Live Photo icon (the concentric circles). You will now see a filmstrip showing all the frames from the short video clip.

  4. Simply slide your finger along this filmstrip. You can see the main photo change as you move through the different moments.

  5. When you find the perfect frame, lift your finger and tap "Make Key Photo."

  6. Tap "Done." The frame you selected is now the new, permanent still photo!

You can change the Key Photo for your Live Photos in the Camera app.

For Android Users (Editing a Motion Photo / Top Shot):

The steps can look a little different depending on your phone's maker (e.g., Samsung vs. Google), but the idea is exactly the same.

  1. Open the "Motion Photo" or "Top Shot" in your gallery or Google Photos app.

  2. Look for an "Edit" option, or on some phones, you can simply swipe up on the photo.

  3. You should see a filmstrip or a series of dots representing the different moments captured in the short video.

  4. Slide through these moments until you find the perfect one.

  5. Look for an option to "Save as copy,""Export," or set the new frame as the main image.

Tap on motion photo to enable or disable setting

This simple editing trick can turn a good-but-not-great photo into a cherished memory you'll be proud to share.


Quick Tech Tip

These "moving pictures" can also be used for fun effects! After you open a Live Photo on an iPhone, tap the word "Live" in the top-left corner. You can turn it into a "Loop" (a short, repeating video) or a "Bounce" (which plays the action forward and then immediately in reverse). It's a fun way to bring a little extra life to a photo of a laughing grandchild or a splashing wave.

Take and edit Live Photos - Apple Support

Tech Term Demystified: 'Key Photo'

When editing a Live Photo or a Motion Photo, the main, still image that you see in your photo library is called the "Key Photo" or "Key Frame." Think of it as the "star of the show." The editing process we described above is simply you telling your phone, "Of all the frames in this short video clip, I want this specific one to be the new Key Photo."


Good News Byte

The AI in modern phone cameras is becoming a proactive photo assistant. On some phones, like the Google Pixel, the "Top Shot" feature will automatically analyze all the frames in a motion photo and suggest what it thinks is the best one—where everyone is smiling and no one is blinking. It will often mark the suggested best shot with a small white dot, taking the guesswork out of finding the perfect moment.


Did You Know?

Before our phones could capture these short video clips, professional photographers used a feature called "Burst Mode" to solve the blinking problem. This feature, which is still on most cameras today, allows the photographer to take a rapid-fire series of ten or twenty photos in a single second just by holding down the shutter button. They would then have to manually sift through all those photos to find the one perfect shot—a process our phones now make much easier!


Your Turn to Be a Photo Editor!

This week, find a Live Photo or Motion Photo in your library—preferably one with people in it. Follow the steps to "Edit" the photo and just explore the different frames and moments captured in the filmstrip. You don't have to save any changes; just see for yourself all the hidden moments your camera has been saving for you!


A Little Bit of Fun

The official rule of group photography: The probability of at least one person blinking is directly proportional to the number of people in the photo (or if my dad is in the photo it is basically 100% 😁).


Happy editing!

Steve

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