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Computational Photography

What modern camera bodies can do that film never could — and that even ten-year-old digital bodies couldn't either. A field guide to the in-camera tricks that turn multiple frames, sensor wiggles, and clever timing into images you couldn't capture with a single shutter press.

12 min read · Last updated May 2026

What "computational" actually means

A traditional photograph is one exposure, captured by light hitting a sensor (or film) once. Computational photography is anything that uses more than one exposure, or moves the sensor, or runs an algorithm on the way to the final image. The term was coined by Steve Mann in 1995 and re-popularized by Marc Levoy at Stanford in 2004 — Levoy later led Google's HDR+ and Night Sight work on the Pixel phones, which is why "computational" got attached to phone photography in most people's minds.

But cameras have been doing it quietly for years. Olympus shipped Live Composite in 2014. Sony pioneered Sweep Panorama on the original NEX in 2010. What changed in the last few years is that high-end mirrorless bodies started doing it seriously — sensor-shift high-res files at 240 megapixels, in-camera ND filters that simulate ten-stop neutral density, AF systems that lock onto stars, and shutter buffers that capture the moment before you press the button. These features won't make a bad photo good. But they let you take pictures that you otherwise could not have taken at all.

The honest version: "computational photography" is a marketing umbrella for a dozen unrelated tricks. Each one solves a different problem. The rest of this page is a tour of the most useful ones, what they actually do, when you'd reach for them, and which bodies on your shelf can do what.

High-Resolution Shot (Pixel Shift)

a.k.a. Pixel Shift Multi Shooting · Pixel Shift Resolution

The sensor takes between 4 and 16 exposures, physically moving by half a pixel or one full pixel between each shot. The frames are combined — either in-camera or on a desktop — into a much higher-resolution file. A 20-megapixel Micro Four Thirds body produces an 80MP image. A 60MP Sony A7R V can produce a 240MP file.

Sensor shifts ½ pixel between exposures Shot 1 Shot 2 (→) Shot 3 (↓)

When you'd use it

Studio product, art reproduction, archival work, landscape prints. Anything where the subject won't move and you'll be looking at the file at 100%. Tripod is required for the classic version. The handheld variant (covered next) trades a little resolution for the ability to shoot off the tripod.

Cameras on your shelf with it

FujifilmGFX100S IIyes (400MP Pixel Shift), X-E5yes (160MP Pixel Shift), X-H2yes (160MP Pixel Shift), X-T5yes (160MP Pixel Shift, desktop merge)
LeicaSL3yes (Multishot, 184MP)
NikonZ5 IIyes (Pixel Shift), Z6 IIIyes (Pixel Shift, desktop merge), Z8yes (Pixel Shift, desktop NX Studio merge), Zfyes (Pixel Shift)
PanasonicLumix G9 IIyes (100MP HRM, tripod + handheld), Lumix GH7yes (100MP HRM, tripod + handheld), Lumix S1 IIyes (96MP High Resolution Mode), Lumix S1Hyes (96MP High Resolution Mode, tripod), Lumix S1R IIyes (177MP High Resolution Mode), Lumix S5 IIyes (96MP HRM), Lumix S5 IIXyes (96MP HRM)
SonyAlpha 1 IIyes (Pixel Shift, 199MP, desktop merge), Alpha 7 IVyes (Pixel Shift, 240MP), Alpha 7R Vyes (Pixel Shift, 240MP, desktop merge)

See it in action

Handheld High-Res

Same idea as Pixel Shift but the camera intentionally uses the natural micro-motion of your hands to do the sensor shifting. No tripod needed. Olympus introduced this on the E-M1X in 2019 and it's still the trick most people don't realize a Micro Four Thirds body can do. Panasonic and OM both ship 50MP and 100MP handheld variants today; Sony and Nikon's pixel-shift modes still require a tripod.

When you'd use it

Travel landscape, gallery shooting, anywhere a tripod is impractical or forbidden. You're trading a bit of theoretical resolution and some risk of motion artifacts (leaves, water, people) for the freedom to shoot the way you'd shoot any normal frame.

Cameras with it

OlympusOM-D E-M1 Mark III25MP / 50MP, OM-D E-M1X25MP / 50MP, OM-D E-M5 Mark III25MP / 50MP
OM Digital SolutionsOM System OM-150MP, OM System OM-1 Mark II50MP, OM System OM-350MP, OM System OM-525MP / 50MP

See it in action

Live ND

A neutral density filter blocks light so you can use a slow shutter speed in bright daylight — the trick that turns a waterfall into silk or moving clouds into streaks. Live ND simulates one in software: the camera takes a rapid burst of short exposures and blends them into a single file that looks like a long exposure. No physical filter, and you can preview the effect on the rear screen before you commit.

OM bodies offer up to 6 stops of equivalent ND (ND2 to ND64) and the OM-1 II adds an even stronger ND128. The Fuji GFX100RF and Canon PowerShot V1 also offer hardware-or-digital hybrid versions. Most other systems either don't have it or don't have a true preview.

When you'd use it

Waterfalls and creeks without lugging filters. Cloud movement on landscapes. Crowds at landmarks (people moving through a frame ghost out and disappear). Anywhere you want the look of a 1-to-30-second exposure without the physical accessory or, often, even a tripod — Live ND combined with strong IBIS works handheld for shorter equivalent shutters.

Cameras with it

CanonPowerShot V1yes (built-in 3-stop ND)
FujifilmGFX100RFyes (digital ND, up to ND64 effective)
OlympusOM-D E-M1 Mark IIIND2-32 (5 stops), OM-D E-M1XND2-32 (5 stops)
OM Digital SolutionsOM System OM-1ND2-64 (6 stops), OM System OM-1 Mark IIND2-64 (6 stops), OM System OM-3ND2-64 (6 stops), OM System OM-5ND2-32 (5 stops)
PanasonicLumix S1 IILive View Composite (light mode)
RicohGR IIIyes (built-in 2-stop ND), GR IIIxyes (built-in 2-stop ND)

See it in action

Live GND (graduated ND)

A graduated ND filter is darker on top and clear on the bottom — landscape photographers use them to hold back a bright sky while keeping the foreground exposed. Live GND simulates one in-camera, and as of 2026 it's exclusive to two bodies: the OM-1 Mark II and the OM-3. You can dial the transition point, the soft/medium/hard gradient, and the orientation, then preview the result on screen.

When you'd use it

Sunrise and sunset landscapes where the sky is several stops brighter than the foreground. Dynamic-range rescues without the bracketing-and-blending workflow.

Cameras with it

Live Composite

Olympus' signature trick and still effectively exclusive to Olympus/OM bodies. The camera takes one base exposure for the foreground and ambient light, then keeps shooting — but only adds new, brighter light to the composite. Star trails, fireworks, light painting, traffic streaks all become trivial to capture.

Each new frame contributes only its brighter pixels Base + frame 2 + frame 3 + frame 4 Result

When you'd use it

Star trails (set it and walk away — finish when the trails look right). Fireworks (no guessing exposure). Light painting (paint your subject and watch it build). Traffic light trails on a city street. Lightning. The killer feature: you watch the image build on the rear LCD in real time and stop when it looks done.

Cameras with it

PanasonicLumix G9 IIyes (Live View Composite), Lumix GH7yes (Live View Composite), Lumix S1 IIyes (Live View Composite), Lumix S1Hyes (Live View Composite), Lumix S1R IIyes (Live View Composite), Lumix S5 IIyes (Live View Composite), Lumix S5 IIX

Note: Panasonic ships a similar feature called "Live View Composite" on the L-mount S-series and on M4/3 bodies including the GH7 and G9 II. It works the same way and is rolled into this list.

See it in action

Focus Stacking & Focus Bracketing

At close focusing distances and wide apertures, depth of field collapses to fractions of a millimeter. Focus stacking solves this by taking a series of frames at stepped focus distances and combining the sharp regions of each into one fully-sharp final image.

Two flavors exist on most cameras: focus bracketing just shoots the sequence and leaves the compositing for desktop software (Helicon Focus, Photoshop, Affinity). In-camera focus stacking does the composite right on the body and gives you a finished JPG/RAW pair. Olympus and OM lead here; Canon's R5 II and R1 added Depth Composite in 2024; Panasonic does it through Post Focus + Focus Stacking on most M4/3 bodies.

Each frame focuses on a different depth slice slice 1 slice 2 slice 3 slice 4 slice 5

When you'd use it

Macro photography (insects, jewelry, food, products). Landscape work where a near foreground element matters. Anywhere you want everything sharp from front to back without stopping down so far that diffraction softens the file.

In-camera composite

OlympusOM-D E-M1 Mark II8 frames, OM-D E-M1 Mark III8 frames, OM-D E-M1X8 frames, OM-D E-M5 Mark III8 frames
OM Digital SolutionsOM System OM-115 frames / 5s, OM System OM-1 Mark II15 frames / 5s, OM System OM-315 frames, OM System OM-58 frames, OM System Tough TG-7
PanasonicLumix G9 II, Lumix GH7, Lumix LX100 IIyes (Post Focus + Focus Stacking), Lumix S1 IIyes (in-camera focus stack composite), Lumix S1H, Lumix S1R II, Lumix S5 II, Lumix S5 IIX

Bracket only (desktop merge)

See it in action

Pre-Capture

a.k.a. Pro Capture · Pre-Release Capture · Pre-shot ES · Pre-Continuous

The single most useful computational feature for action photographers, and the one that's hardest to explain to people who haven't used it. While you have the shutter half-pressed, the camera is already shooting into a circular buffer. When you fully press, it saves the last second or so of frames in addition to everything that comes after. You can effectively capture the moment before you reacted.

Pre-capture saves frames from before you press the shutter SHUTTER PRESS ~1s pre-buffer normal burst

Bird taking off from a branch, dog catching a frisbee, kid on a swing at peak height — these are the moments where your reflexes are too slow but the camera's aren't. Pro Capture on the OM-1 II buffers up to 70 frames before the press at 120fps. Sony's a9 III hits 120fps with global shutter and Pre-Capture. Nikon's Pre-Release Capture on the Z8/Z9/Z50 II buffers up to 1 second.

When you'd use it

Wildlife, sports, kids, pets — anything unpredictable. Once you start using it, you stop thinking of "burst mode" the same way: you don't react to the action, you wait for it and then capture the seconds you just lived through.

Cameras with it

CanonEOS R10RAW Burst with Pre-shooting, EOS R6 Mark IIPre-Continuous (RAW Burst with Pre-shooting, electronic shutter only), EOS R7RAW Burst with Pre-shooting, EOS R8RAW Burst with Pre-shooting
FujifilmX-E5Pre-shot ES, X-H2Pre-shot ES, X-H2SPre-shot ES (40fps electronic, ~20 pre), X-S20Pre-shot ES, X-T5Pre-shot ES (electronic shutter only, ~20 frames)
NikonZ5 IIPre-Release Capture, Z50 IIPre-Release Capture (C15/C30, up to 1s pre), Z6 IIIPre-Release Capture, Z8Pre-Release Capture (C30/C60/C120, up to 1s pre), ZfPre-Release Capture
OlympusOM-D E-M1 Mark II60fps / 35 pre, OM-D E-M1 Mark III60fps / 35 pre, OM-D E-M1X60fps / 35 pre, OM-D E-M5 Mark III30fps / 14 pre
OM Digital SolutionsOM System OM-1120fps / 35 pre, OM System OM-1 Mark II120fps / 70 pre, OM System OM-3120fps, OM System OM-530fps / 15 pre, OM System Tough TG-7Pro Capture (limited)
PanasonicLumix G9 IISH Pre-Burst, Lumix GH7SH Pre-Burst, Lumix LX100 IIyes (4K Pre-Burst), Lumix S1 IISH Pre-Burst, Lumix S1R IISH Pre-Burst, Lumix S5 IISH Pre-Burst, Lumix S5 IIXSH Pre-Burst
SonyAlpha 1 IIPre-Capture (up to 1s pre), Alpha 9 IIIPre-Capture (up to 1s, 120fps)

See it in action

In-Camera HDR

High Dynamic Range merges three or more bracketed exposures into a single image that holds detail in both deep shadows and bright highlights. Mirrorless bodies almost universally do this for JPG/HEIF output now. Don't expect smartphone-style HDR magic from a dedicated camera — phones do far more aggressive computational tone-mapping. But the in-camera HDR on most modern bodies is competent and saves you the desktop bracket-merge step for casual sharing.

Modern bodies also offer HDR PQ / HLG: a 10-bit HEIF or video file in the BT.2020 PQ color space that, when displayed on an HDR monitor or TV, shows extra dynamic range without any merging. Different feature, same name — worth knowing the distinction.

Cameras with it

See it in action

Multiple Exposure

A direct descendant of the film-era trick where you'd not advance the film between two shots and let two scenes overlay. Modern bodies blend 2-9 frames into a single composite with selectable blend modes (additive, average, lighten, darken). Used most often for double-exposure portraits, dreamy nature studies, or layering a silhouette over a texture.

Cameras with it

See it in action

Live Time / Live Bulb

Long exposures are usually a guessing game — you set 30 seconds, you check the back, you adjust, you re-shoot. Live Time and Live Bulb (Olympus terminology) show the exposure building on the rear screen in real time. You stop when the histogram or the image looks right. No guessing on the 5-minute exposure of a moonlit scene; no wasted retakes when you set 60 seconds and only needed 22.

Cameras with it

Note: Panasonic's Live View Composite (above) effectively covers Live Time/Bulb on those bodies — same display-as-it-builds workflow.

Astro / Starry Sky AF

Conventional autofocus searches for contrast edges, which stars don't really have. Most night photographers manually focus to infinity and hope. Modern bodies now have AF algorithms specifically tuned to lock on point sources of light. OM System's "Starry Sky AF" was the first; Nikon's Starlight View on the Z8/Z9/Z6 III/Z5 II/Zf shows you the framing on the LCD even in near-darkness and pairs with low-light AF down to -9 EV; Canon's R5 and R5 II will autofocus down to -7 EV in dim conditions.

When you'd use it

Milky Way photography, star fields, nightscapes. Pair it with Live Composite (on Olympus/OM bodies) and you have an astrophotography rig that beats most DSLR-era setups for less work.

Cameras with it

CanonEOS R10low-light AF to -4 EV, EOS R5low-light AF to -6 EV, EOS R5 Clow-light AF to -6 EV, EOS R50low-light AF to -4 EV, EOS R6 Mark IIlow-light AF to -6.5 EV, EOS R7low-light AF to -5 EV, EOS R8low-light AF to -6.5 EV
NikonZ5 IIStarlight View, Z50 IIStarlight View, Z6 IIIStarlight View + low-light AF, Z8Starlight View + AF to -9 EV, ZfStarlight View
OlympusOM-D E-M1 Mark III, OM-D E-M1Xyes (added via firmware)

See it in action

In-Camera Panorama

Pan the camera across a scene and the body stitches the result into one wide image. Sony pioneered this on the original NEX line as "Sweep Panorama" and it's been a fixture of their compacts ever since. Canon added Panoramic Shot mode to the R-series. Fuji's Panorama mode lives on most X-series bodies. Quality varies a lot — these are JPG-only and the stitching can fail on moving subjects — but they're a one-button option when you don't want to merge later.

Cameras with it

CanonEOS R10, EOS R5yes (Panoramic Shot mode), EOS R5 C, EOS R50, EOS R6 Mark II, EOS R7, EOS R8
FujifilmGFX100RFyes (Aspect Ratio modes), GFX100S II, X-E5, X-H2, X-H2S, X-M5, X-S20, X-T30 II, X-T5yes (Panorama mode), X100VI
LeicaD-Lux 8
SonyRX10 IV, RX100 VIIyes (Sweep Panorama)

See it in action

Handheld Night Mode

The phone-style trick: shoot a quick burst at high ISO, align the frames in software, and average them to crush noise. Sony was the first to put this in a dedicated camera with "Handheld Twilight" and "Anti-Motion Blur" on the RX100 line. Canon, Panasonic, and others followed with similar Hybrid Auto / Night Scene modes. It won't beat a tripod and a 10-second exposure, but it gives you something usable in a venue where neither is an option.

Cameras with it

CanonEOS R10, EOS R5yes (Handheld Night Scene), EOS R5 C, EOS R50, EOS R6 Mark II, EOS R7, EOS R8, PowerShot V1
LeicaD-Lux 8
OM Digital SolutionsOM System Tough TG-7
PanasonicLumix LX100 IIyes (Handheld Night Shot)
SonyRX10 IV, RX100 VIIyes (Handheld Twilight)

Feature matrix

Quick reference. Hover any value to see the spec. ● = full support, value = specific spec, — = not supported. Filtered to the bodies in your shelf that fit the modern-ILC and premium-compact criteria.

Camera IBIS Hi-Res HH Hi-Res Live ND Live GND Live Comp Focus Stack Pre-Cap HDR Multi-Exp Live Time Astro AF Pano HH Night
OM System OM-1 Mark II 8.5 50MP ND2-64 (6 stops) 15 frames / 5s 120fps / 70 pre
OM System OM-1 7.5 50MP ND2-64 (6 stops) 15 frames / 5s 120fps / 35 pre
OM System OM-3 7.5 50MP ND2-64 (6 stops) 15 frames 120fps
OM System OM-5 7.5 25MP / 50MP ND2-32 (5 stops) 8 frames 30fps / 15 pre
OM System Tough TG-7 Pro Capture (limited)
Olympus OM-D E-M1X 7.5 25MP / 50MP ND2-32 (5 stops) 8 frames 60fps / 35 pre yes (added via firmware)
Olympus OM-D E-M1 Mark III 7.5 25MP / 50MP ND2-32 (5 stops) 8 frames 60fps / 35 pre
Olympus OM-D E-M1 Mark II 5.5 8 frames 60fps / 35 pre
Olympus OM-D E-M1 5.0
Olympus OM-D E-M5 Mark III 6.5 25MP / 50MP 8 frames 30fps / 14 pre
Olympus OM-D E-M5 Mark II 5.0 yes (40MP)
Olympus OM-D E-M5 5.0 yes (Live Bulb)
Olympus OM-D E-M10 Mark IV 4.5
Olympus OM-D E-M10 Mark III 4.0
Olympus OM-D E-M10 Mark II 4.0
Olympus OM-D E-M10 3.5
Olympus PEN-F 5.0 yes (50MP / 80MP RAW)
Canon EOS R5 8.0 no (Focus Bracketing only; composite via DPP desktop) yes (HDR PQ + HDR mode) yes (up to 9 frames) low-light AF to -6 EV yes (Panoramic Shot mode) yes (Handheld Night Scene)
Canon EOS R5 C no (electronic IS only) low-light AF to -6 EV
Canon EOS R6 Mark II 8.0 Pre-Continuous (RAW Burst with Pre-shooting, electronic shutter only) low-light AF to -6.5 EV
Canon EOS R7 7.0 RAW Burst with Pre-shooting low-light AF to -5 EV
Canon EOS R8 no (electronic IS only) RAW Burst with Pre-shooting low-light AF to -6.5 EV
Canon EOS R10 RAW Burst with Pre-shooting low-light AF to -4 EV
Canon EOS R50 low-light AF to -4 EV
Canon PowerShot V1 no (digital IS) yes (built-in 3-stop ND)
Fujifilm X-T5 7.0 yes (160MP Pixel Shift, desktop merge) Pre-shot ES (electronic shutter only, ~20 frames) yes (HDR mode + HDR PQ) yes (up to 9) yes (Panorama mode)
Fujifilm X-H2 7.0 yes (160MP Pixel Shift) Pre-shot ES
Fujifilm X-H2S 7.0 Pre-shot ES (40fps electronic, ~20 pre)
Fujifilm X-S20 7.0 Pre-shot ES
Fujifilm X-T30 II
Fujifilm X-E5 7.0 yes (160MP Pixel Shift) Pre-shot ES
Fujifilm X100VI 6.0
Fujifilm X half yes (Diptych mode)
Fujifilm X-M5 no (digital IS only)
Fujifilm GFX100S II 8.0 yes (400MP Pixel Shift)
Fujifilm GFX100RF yes (digital ND, up to ND64 effective) yes (Aspect Ratio modes)
Leica Q3 no (lens IS)
Leica M11 yes (limited)
Leica M11-P yes (limited)
Leica M11-D
Leica SL3 5.0 yes (Multishot, 184MP)
Leica D-Lux 8 no (lens OIS)
Nikon Z8 6.0 yes (Pixel Shift, desktop NX Studio merge) no (Focus Shift only) Pre-Release Capture (C30/C60/C120, up to 1s pre) yes (HDR + HLG) yes (Multiple Exposure, up to 10) Starlight View + AF to -9 EV
Nikon Z6 III 8.0 yes (Pixel Shift, desktop merge) no (Focus Shift only) Pre-Release Capture Starlight View + low-light AF
Nikon Z5 II 7.5 yes (Pixel Shift) Pre-Release Capture Starlight View
Nikon Z50 II Pre-Release Capture (C15/C30, up to 1s pre) Starlight View
Nikon Zf 8.0 yes (Pixel Shift) Pre-Release Capture Starlight View
Nikon Zfc
Panasonic Lumix S1 II 8.0 yes (96MP High Resolution Mode) yes (handheld High-Res) Live View Composite (light mode) yes (Live View Composite) yes (in-camera focus stack composite) SH Pre-Burst yes (Live View Composite covers it)
Panasonic Lumix S1R II 8.0 yes (177MP High Resolution Mode) yes (Live View Composite) SH Pre-Burst
Panasonic Lumix S1H 6.5 yes (96MP High Resolution Mode, tripod) yes (Live View Composite)
Panasonic Lumix S5 II 6.5 yes (96MP HRM) yes (Live View Composite) SH Pre-Burst
Panasonic Lumix S5 IIX 6.5 yes (96MP HRM) SH Pre-Burst
Panasonic Lumix S9 5.0
Panasonic Lumix GH7 7.5 yes (100MP HRM, tripod + handheld) yes (Live View Composite) SH Pre-Burst
Panasonic Lumix G9 II 8.0 yes (100MP HRM, tripod + handheld) yes (Live View Composite) SH Pre-Burst
Panasonic Lumix G100D no (digital IS only)
Panasonic Lumix LX100 II no (lens OIS) yes (Post Focus + Focus Stacking) yes (4K Pre-Burst) yes (Handheld Night Shot)
Ricoh GR III 4.0 (3-axis) yes (built-in 2-stop ND)
Ricoh GR IIIx 4.0 (3-axis) yes (built-in 2-stop ND)
Sony Alpha 1 II 8.5 yes (Pixel Shift, 199MP, desktop merge) Pre-Capture (up to 1s pre) yes (HLG + HDR PQ)
Sony Alpha 9 III 8.0 Pre-Capture (up to 1s, 120fps)
Sony Alpha 7R V 8.0 yes (Pixel Shift, 240MP, desktop merge)
Sony Alpha 7 IV 5.5 yes (Pixel Shift, 240MP)
Sony Alpha 7C II 7.0
Sony Alpha 6700 5.0
Sony ZV-E10 no (digital IS)
Sony RX100 VII no (lens OSS) no (Single Burst Shooting only) yes (Auto HDR + DRO) yes (Sweep Panorama) yes (Handheld Twilight)
Sony RX10 IV no (lens OSS) yes (Auto HDR + DRO)

Sourced from src/data/computational-features.json. Olympus/OM rows ported from the Computational Photography artifact; non-Olympus rows researched from manufacturer specs and reliable reviews. Spot-checks welcome — corrections to the JSON file flow through here automatically.

A note on what's missing

This page focuses on dedicated-camera features. Computational photography on smartphones is its own enormous topic (HDR+, Night Sight, semantic segmentation, deep-learned demosaic, neural super-resolution) and arguably more advanced than anything here. The dedicated camera world is, broadly, ten years behind the phones on raw computational ambition — but it's catching up, and a handful of bodies (the OM-1 II, Panasonic G9 II, Sony A9 III, Nikon Z8) are doing things no phone can. Worth a separate explainer eventually.