Adobe's Project Indigo, a computational photography app, has finally added support for the iPhone 17 series, after initially struggling with the new square-format selfie sensor and temporarily disabling the front-facing camera. The app, popular for its softer image processing, will enable selfie support with a future iOS update (26.1), but currently only supports the rear camera on iPhone 17.
The release of support for Adobe's Project Indigo on the iPhone 17 is delayed due to issues with the new 18-megapixel selfie camera, which are being addressed in an upcoming iOS 26.1 update. The support might be disabled temporarily until the fix is shipped, with a potential update expected soon.
Adobe has launched Project Indigo, a new computational photography app for iPhone that offers manual controls, natural-looking HDR, and advanced features like multi-frame super-resolution and long exposure, aiming to improve smartphone photography quality and experience.
Adobe's new iPhone camera app, Project Indigo, developed by former Pixel camera engineers, offers natural-looking photos with manual controls, AI-powered features, and high-quality output, aiming to improve upon typical smartphone camera limitations. It is available for free on recent iPhones, with an Android version planned.
Adobe, leveraging the expertise of former Google engineers behind the Pixel camera, has launched 'Project Indigo,' an advanced computational photography app for iPhone that offers manual controls, high image quality, and features like reflection removal; an Android version is expected later.