iOS 13 introduces a new multi-camera capture feature that lets camera apps simultaneously capture photos, video, audio, depth and metadata like objects and faces from multiple onboard cameras and microphones.

According to Apple’s documentation for developers, simultaneous capture of photos and video from multiple cameras is supported on devices powered by the Apple A12 Bionic chip or newer. As an illustration, simultaneous capture of the output from the front and back cameras into a single movie file  requires an iPhone XS, iPhone XS Max or iPhone XR smartphone, or a 2018 iPad Pro.

Like RAW capture, this isn’t something you’ll find in Apple’s own stock app as . The company is providing multi-camera capture as a feature available to developers through official APIs.

The multi-camera capture in iOS 13 requires newer hardware.

We expect that popular camera apps like Halide will be among first to implement these new features. To demonstrated how it works, an engineer showed off a proof-of-concept app for picture-in-picture video capture that combines video feeds from both front and back camera. The user can then switch between two camera feeds when playing back the multi-cam video in the Photos app.

macOS has supported multi-camera capturing since OS X Lion.

The documentation states that it is also possible to configure the multiple microphones on an iOS device device to shape the sound that is captured. Multi-camera capture is part of a broader set of advances for camera capture and photo segmentation in iOS 13.

As an example, iOS 13 leverages on-device machine to provide new segmentation mattes for any captured photo. The Photos app benefits from that semantic segmentation in a few interesting ways, like allowing the user to isolate hair, skin and teeth in a photo.

 

In fact, this new capability will be also coming to third-party camera apps that choose to implement it. As you can imagine, this will make portraiture photography even better than iOS 12’s portrait effects matte that isolates the whole subject from the background.

One can easily imagine an app like Darkroom with the ability to separately isolate a subject’s hair, skin or teeth so they can be easily repainted or adjusted.

How do you like multi-camera capture in iOS 13?

What would you use this feature for?