Until August 2021, my Google Photos library was basically a wall of cat photos. Then, a small human entered the picture, and you can see a distinct dividing line in my photographic priorities: one day it was Cat, the next day, Baby.
Many of the other parents I know have experienced the same phenomenon. And while cats aren’t the most willing photo subjects on earth, well, have you met a toddler? They are agents of chaos. This makes for a special kind of dilemma: you must photograph Baby because they are the cutest being to ever grace the planet, but they also refuse to sit still or stop moving for even one goddamn second while you take a picture.
This spurs you to take even more photos in the hopes that just one will be in focus and, if you’re lucky, your subject will be looking at the camera. This is how you wind up with gigabytes of kid photos and not a single one that’s suitable for your holiday card. Phone cameras have gotten better over the past few years, with features that take a burst of photos and pick the best shot, and low-light image quality has generally improved, too. But there’s one phone in particular that uses some clever tricks to solve a lot of the pain points associated with kid photography: the Google Pixel 8.
By Google Pixel 8, I mean either the Pixel 8 or the pricier Pixel 8 Pro. The 8 Pro comes with a 5x telephoto lens that you don’t get on the standard model, and it certainly has its benefits. Same with the manual camera controls on the Pro model. They’re both nice to have, and if you want ’em, go for it. But they’re not must-have features — especially if you’re just after nice snapshots of your kids in their day-to-day environment.
The Pixel 8 does a particularly good job of recognizing when you’re taking pictures of a moving subject and raises the shutter speed, vastly increasing your chances of getting a sharp shot. I took the Pixel 8 Pro and the iPhone 15 Pro Max to the playground and used them side by side as my kid ran around and did kid stuff. I got many more sharp photos with the Pixel 8 Pro, mainly because the iPhone insisted on limiting the shutter speed to 1/60sec, while the Pixel went up to 1/400sec.
The Pixel 8 and 8 Pro introduce a handful of new AI-powered editing tools in Google Photos, and the most parent-friendly of all is probably Best Take. When you take a series of very similar photos within a 10-second timeframe, Google Photos will let you change the expressions of the people in the scene by allowing you to pick a face from a different image in the series.
Audio Magic Eraser is another AI feature in Google Photos that anyone can appreciate but I suspect parents will find especially useful. It will automatically identify and isolate different audio channels in your video, separating background noise from speech, for example, and allows you to turn down or completely mute each channel. This immediately spoke to me as a parent because a) I frequently record video of my kid doing cute and ridiculous things to send to the grandparents, and b) there’s almost always some background noise like the washing machine or the radio playing that get in the way of the cuteness.
Case in point, the first clip I tried it on was a video of my kid in the back seat of the car singing an improvised version of “Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star” — a real classic of the kid video genre. The car radio is playing in my video, which makes him harder to hear, but if I had turned the stereo down before taking the video, it might have tipped him off. Audio Magic Eraser did exactly what it’s supposed to do: identified the music and allowed me to turn it all the way down so his voice comes through much clearer.
For all of the parent-friendly tools on the Pixel 8, there’s one important feature that’s still lagging behind the competition: portrait mode. This is a real bummer because a lot of the photos I take of my kid are in portrait mode no matter which phone I’m using at the moment. Take a look at the Pixel 8 Pro’s portrait mode versus the iPhone 15 Pro Max’s below.