X

An excellent camera interface (pictures)

KitCam has an abundance of tools, lenses, and filters, but somehow manages to be easy to navigate.

Jason_Parker.jpg
Jason_Parker.jpg
Jason Parker
SetLightingLevelsWhiteBalance.png
1 of 5 Screenshot by Jason Parker/CNET

Fine-tuning your shot

You can pick your lens and the type of film you want to use, as well as make lighting adjustments, all before taking your picture.
ChooseFilmsLivePreview.png
2 of 5 Screenshot by Jason Parker/CNET

Choose your film

KitCam comes with several film types to give your image different effect qualities.
ChooseLensesAfterShot.png
3 of 5 Screenshot by Jason Parker/CNET

Make changes afterwards

Even though you can get live previews of everything in the app, you also have the option to pick lenses and films, and make other editing tweaks after you take the shot.
ShareSocialOtherOptions.png
4 of 5 Screenshot by Jason Parker/CNET

Share your shots

KitCam has a number of sharing options for social networking sites, access-anywhere services (like Dropbox), and even FTP uploading.
ToolsImageSizesShotTypes.png
5 of 5 Screenshot by Jason Parker/CNET

Tons of tools

Hit the gear icon to pick shot types, set your aspect ratio, turn on the stabilizer, and add onscreen tools to make your photo perfect.

More Galleries

Go Inside the Apple iPhone 15 and iPhone 15 Pro: See How the New iPhones Look and Work
iphone 15 in different color from an angled view

Go Inside the Apple iPhone 15 and iPhone 15 Pro: See How the New iPhones Look and Work

21 Photos
17 Hidden iOS 17 Features and Settings on Your iPhone
Invitation for the Apple September iPhone 15 event

17 Hidden iOS 17 Features and Settings on Your iPhone

18 Photos
Astronomy Photographer of the Year Winners Reveal Our Stunning Universe
andromeda

Astronomy Photographer of the Year Winners Reveal Our Stunning Universe

16 Photos
I Got an Early Look at Intel's Glass Packaging Tech for Faster Chips
Rahul Manepalli, right, Intel's module engineering leader, shows a glass substrate panel before it's sliced into the small rectangles that will be bonded to the undersides of hundreds of test processors. The technology, shown here at Intel's CH8 facility in Chandler, Arizona, stands to improve performance and power consumption of advanced processors arriving later this decade. Glass substrates should permit physically larger processors comprised of several small "chiplets" for AI and data center work, but Intel expects they'll trickle down to PCs, too.

I Got an Early Look at Intel's Glass Packaging Tech for Faster Chips

20 Photos
Yamaha motorcycle and instrument designers trade jobs (pictures)
yamaha01.jpg

Yamaha motorcycle and instrument designers trade jobs (pictures)

16 Photos
CNET's 'Day of the Dead Devices' altar (pictures)
dia-de-los-muertos-3318-001.jpg

CNET's 'Day of the Dead Devices' altar (pictures)

9 Photos
2007 Los Angeles Auto Show: concept cars
conceptss01_440.jpg

2007 Los Angeles Auto Show: concept cars

14 Photos