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How to use siri to search your photos by date or location

By Daniel Kim

Here’s how to search for a picture on your iPhone or iPad with Siri; it’s a quick and easy way to find photos!

How to use siri to search your photos by date or location

Siri can do a lot, even be a photo finder! You can use Siri to do a picture search for objects in photos in the Photos app. Simply ask Siri to show you pictures of a person, event, business name, caption, object, date, or location, and you’ll see all your photos that fit that description. Here’s how to search for a photo with Siri.

* This post is part of iPhone Life‘s Tip of the Day newsletter. Sign Up. *

How to Use Siri to Search for Objects in Photos

We’ve already gone over how to do a picture search by object without Siri, how to search for a picture by location, and even how to do a reverse image search on your iPhone. For more great, free Siri tutorials, check out our Tip of the Day. Now, let’s cover how to find photos on your iPhone and iPad with Siri. To begin:

  1. Make sure your phone is unlocked and activate Siri by pressing and holding the Home or Side button. Or say, “Hey Siri,” if you have that function enabled.
  2. Tell Siri something along the lines of “Siri, search Photos for dogs.”
  3. Refine your search further by date, location or other criteria by saying something like, “Hey Siri, show me photos of dogs at the beach from 2018.” or “Show me pictures of dogs with the caption Snoopy.”
  4. Siri will show you all the pictures of dogs that meet those criteria in your Camera Roll. Siri isn’t always accurate with finding photos, though, as you can see from the photo of a baby goat included with the dog pictures!
  5. If there are no photos that match your query, Siri will offer you images from the web.

Find those vacation or event photos easily by doing a Siri search on your iPhone.

How to use siri to search your photos by date or location

You probably know how to do an image search on your iPhone, but did you know you could use Siri to search your photos by date and location? With this tip for doing a photo search on your iPhone, you can easily find pictures from special occasions and vacations, so long as you remember when and/or where they were taken.

* This post is part of iPhone Life‘s Tip of the Day newsletter. Sign Up. *

Before we go into how to search by photo on your iPhone with Siri, you’ll need to make sure that location services is turned on for your Camera app. To learn more about Camera and Photos, sign up for our Tip of the Day newsletter.

  1. To search, activate Siri by pressing and holding the side button or by saying “Hey Siri.”
  2. On older iPhones with a Home button, you’ll press and hold the Home button or say “Hey Siri.”

How to use siri to search your photos by date or location

Next, say or type something like “show me photos from Austin Texas this Month.”

How to use siri to search your photos by date or location

The photos with matching time and location stamps will appear. You’ll be able to see the location and date tags in the search bar.

How to use siri to search your photos by date or location

Believe it or not, that’s all there is to it! You can try any combination of time and location to see what works best for you, but keep in mind that only photos taken while Location Services were enabled for the Camera app will be tagged with a location to search by.

Walter Glenn is a former Editorial Director for How-To Geek and its sister sites. He has more than 30 years of experience in the computer industry and over 20 years as a technical writer and editor. He’s written hundreds of articles for How-To Geek and edited thousands. He’s authored or co-authored over 30 computer-related books in more than a dozen languages for publishers like Microsoft Press, O’Reilly, and Osborne/McGraw-Hill. He’s also written hundreds of white papers, articles, user manuals, and courseware over the years. Read more.

How to use siri to search your photos by date or location

Apple’s Photos app is a pretty solid offering, but if you take a lot of photos with your iPhone, you know it can be a hassle scrolling through them all to find photos you took at a certain location or on a certain date. Among all the other useful things Siri can help you with, she can also help make finding photos a whole lot easier.

Using Siri to search your photos is pretty straightforward. Fire up Siri by holding down your Home button or by saying “Hey Siri” if you have that feature enabled. Once she’s listening, you can say something like “Show me photos from June 30.”

How to use siri to search your photos by date or location

If she finds matching photos, Siri will open your Photos app for you with photos from that date selected. In my case, it’s all screenshots, since take a lot of those.

How to use siri to search your photos by date or location

You can also use Siri to search for photos taken at a specific location, so long as you have location services enabled for your camera. As of this writing, Siri can only handle searching by city name, even though the information for a photo might show a more specific location, such as a street name. While she’s listening, just say something like “Show me photos from Huntsville.”

How to use siri to search your photos by date or location

Again, Siri will flip you over to the Photos app to show you results for photos taken at the specified location and grouped by date.

How to use siri to search your photos by date or location

And finally, if you want to get a bit more specific with your search, you can ask Siri to show you photos from a particular location and taken on a specific date. For example, you could tell her something like “Show me photos from Huntsville on June 9.”

How to use siri to search your photos by date or location

And you’d get back just the results you want displayed in the Photos app.

How to use siri to search your photos by date or location

That’s all she can do right now. We’re hoping that Siri will attain more photo-searching powers in the future, since both Siri and the Photos app are due for a feature boost in the upcoming iOS 10. But for now, at least she can help you narrow down your search if you tend to be a photo hoarder.

Find those vacation or event photos easily by doing a Siri search on your iPhone.

How to use siri to search your photos by date or location

You probably know how to do an image search on your iPhone, but did you know you could use Siri to search your photos by date and location? With this tip for doing a photo search on your iPhone, you can easily find pictures from special occasions and vacations, so long as you remember when and/or where they were taken.

* This post is part of iPhone Life‘s Tip of the Day newsletter. Sign Up. *

Before we go into how to search by photo on your iPhone with Siri, you’ll need to make sure that location services is turned on for your Camera app. To learn more about Camera and Photos, sign up for our Tip of the Day newsletter.

  1. To search, activate Siri by pressing and holding the side button or by saying “Hey Siri.”
  2. On older iPhones with a Home button, you’ll press and hold the Home button or say “Hey Siri.”

How to use siri to search your photos by date or location

Next, say or type something like “show me photos from Austin Texas this Month.”

How to use siri to search your photos by date or location

The photos with matching time and location stamps will appear. You’ll be able to see the location and date tags in the search bar.

How to use siri to search your photos by date or location

Believe it or not, that’s all there is to it! You can try any combination of time and location to see what works best for you, but keep in mind that only photos taken while Location Services were enabled for the Camera app will be tagged with a location to search by.

How to use siri to search your photos by date or locationSource: Christine Romero-Chan / iMore

Once you set up Siri on the best iPhone and iPad, you may forget that it’s there. Every now and then, you may use it for something like setting a timer in the kitchen, but there are a lot of things that Siri can do. One of those things that you can ask Siri to do is help you find specific photos just by using your voice. There are a few different ways to search your photos with Siri, and we’ll show you how!

You can search for photos by typing in places or dates, or you can search by telling Siri where and when you want to look for them. Say “May, 2019,” and you’ll go right back. Ask for “Cupertino,” and you’ll be there. Combine the places and times, and Siri will take you anywhere — and any when — you want to go!

How to search photos with Siri based on time

Any photo you take on your iPhone or iPad is automatically timestamped with the date. So if you know when you took the photos you are looking for, Siri should help you find them.

    Press and hold the Home or Side button to launch Siri, or say “Hey, Siri.”

Say something like “Show me photos from September.”

How to use siri to search your photos by date or locationSource: iMore

When using the time to find photos with Siri, you can even be more specific by saying a precise date, like “Show me pictures from Sept. 17th,” or even less so by just saying a year.

How to search photos with Siri based on location

Unless you’ve turned off your location services, every photo taken on your iPhone or iPad is automatically tagged with geolocation, meaning that if you know where the photos were taken, Siri can find them for you.

    Press and hold the Home or Side button to launch Siri, or say “Hey, Siri.”

Say something like “Show me photos from Cupertino.”

How to use siri to search your photos by date or locationSource: iMore

Once again, you can be as precise or as broad as you want.

You can do both!

It’s worth mentioning that you can combine these methods to get better search results from Siri. If you went to Rome twice but are trying to show your friends pictures from the most recent trip, you can say something like, “Show me photos from Rome in May.” You can also use Siri to search for photos in folders — asking for “Show me my selfies from November” will search the Selfies folder where your selfies are automatically filed.

    Press and hold the Home or Side button to launch Siri, or say “Hey, Siri.”

Say something like “Show me photos from Disneyland in 2019.”

How to use siri to search your photos by date or locationSource: iMore

How to search photos with Siri based on objects

Apple added the ability to search for things like mountains, lakes, food, cats, and so on. If you search for something that isn’t searchable in your Photos app, Siri will show you a web search result instead.

    Press and hold the Home or Side button to launch Siri, or say “Hey, Siri.”

Say something like “Show me photos of cats.”

How to use siri to search your photos by date or locationSource: iMore

Did we miss anything?

Do you know of any other tricks about searching for photos with Siri? We want to know about them. Drop them in the comments below!

Updated April 2021: These are still the current steps for searching photos with Siri in iOS 14.

How to use siri to search your photos by date or location

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How to use siri to search your photos by date or location

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You do too much swiping as it is.

Siri is getting smarter to where I find myself conversing with Apple’s voice assistant with greater frequency these days — and Siri Shortcuts have yet to arrive. For one, Siri makes it so I don’t have to remember any of my passwords, which is the greatest gift a digital assistant can give me. For another, Siri offers invaluable aid when I want to find an old photo among the thousands stored on my iPhone.

Granted, Siri has room to grow when it comes to helping manage and parse huge photo libraries , but I’ve only recently discovered how powerful Apple’s digital assistant is at locating specific photos. Siri has saved me from tons of furious swiping through the Photos app to dig up an old photo before the person standing next to me loses interest.

Hey Siri, show me photos of.

I thought I was clever in navigating the photos app because I would use the Places album to find photos from past vacations or the Videos album to narrow my search when attempting to locate an old video. Now, I just ask Siri.

Siri can locate photos and videos by a variety of parameters, including date, location, people, objects and activities. And some combination thereof. Here are some examples to get you and Siri started conversing about your photos.

Location

You can be as general or as specific as you need to be, from “Show me photos of Ireland” to “Show me photos of Fenway Park.”

Screenshot by Matt Elliott/CNET

As with locations, you can be specific or general, for example: “Show me photos from December 25, 2006” or “Show me photos from April 2014.” Siri also understands things like “Show me photos from last month” and “Show me photos from last Christmas.”

Screenshot by Matt Elliott/CNET

People

If you have set up the People part of the Photos app by naming your family members and friends, then Siri can help you find photos of the people in your life and camera roll. Combine their name with a date or location to narrow your search, such as “Show me photos of Dan and me in Iowa” or “Show me photos of Samantha from last April.” Siri also knows her front-facing camera from her rear-facing camera, so you can say, “Show me selfies from yesterday.”

Screenshot by Matt Elliott/CNET

Objects and activities

Two things I take photos of with regularity: my dog and my kids on skis. Siri is helpful in finding such subjects: “Show me photos of my dog” and “Show me photos of skiing.” You can also narrow such searches by saying, “Show me photos of my dog in Maine” or “Show me photos of skiing from last February.” Now, when you say “my dog,” Siri just shows you photos of any dog in your photo library. And asking for a specific person skiing, I will note, doesn’t work so well because faces are usually covered by goggles and a helmet.

In iOS 15, Apple made further advancements in on-device machine learning and integrated them into the Photos app to make your iPhone more intelligent at recognizing the contents of pictures.

How to use siri to search your photos by date or location
In other words, the ‌Photos‌ app can now identify various objects, landmarks, animals, books, plants, works of art, and more in your image library, and then offer information about them that it draws from the web.

This new intelligent feature is called Visual Lookup, and the following steps show you how you can use it to get more clued up on the things you’ve taken pictures of with your ‌iPhone‌ through the years.

  1. Open the Photos app on your ‌iPhone‌ and select a picture with a clearly defined subject, such as a flower or animal.
  2. Check the info (“i“) icon at the bottom of the screen. If it has a little star over it, tap it – this indicates there’s a Visual Lookup you can examine.
  3. Tap the little icon in the center of the photo to bring up the Lookup search results.

How to use siri to search your photos by date or location
In Visual Lookup, search results consist of Siri Knowledge, similar images found on the web, and other online sources of information. For all the details on the other new ‌Photos‌ features in ‌iOS 15‌, be sure to check our dedicated roundup.

Top Rated Comments

How to use siri to search your photos by date or location

Must be only in IOS 15 – just tried this is 14.6 and can not find any “i” button.

Still needs work ?

How to use siri to search your photos by date or location

How to use siri to search your photos by date or location

How to use siri to search your photos by date or location

Are y’all sure? Is there something called “tags” that are different than keywords? The only keywords I see in my photo library are ones that I added manually. I’m looking in Photos on my Mac. iOS 14 Photos doesn’t appear to expose keywords. iOS 15 Photos seems like it will expose more of the EXIF data to the user.

Where do I go to see the tags that it adds automatically?

I know Photos has scanned for faces for years now and photos that are geotagged are searchable by location. But I don’t think that’s what we’re talking about.

Best thing to do is likely just try using the search and see how it works. Not sure how else to convince you that the functionality is there. Photos have been searchable with keywords for some time now. The only thing I have done with any of my photos is shoot them on the phone, but they have been automatically categorised and it’s mostly pretty accurate.

It doesn’t add tags/keywords, it builds it’s own internal ‘categories’ lists to which it adds all appropriate photos, and these are exposed to the user through the search function – so if in Photos you search for ‘car’ it will return any photos it has put in its ‘cars’ category, as well as anything you’ve tagged with ‘car’. There’s always a few it gets wrong, but it’s sometimes very impressive (e.g. I thought it had falsely identified a photo as including a cat, but there was a very small reflection of our family cat in a window). It will also file a photo under multiple categories if appropriate so you can search ‘car tree’ to just get photos that include both.

The only slight downside is you can’t correct it – if it doesn’t recognise there’s a car in your photo, you can add a keyword, but if it thinks there’s a car in your photo but there isn’t, you can’t tell it so.

Photos has actually supported this general search function for several years now, though the number of categories it recognises has continued to grow.

How to use siri to search your photos by date or location

Siri isn’t just a great digital assistant on your iPhone or Mac; this handy tool can do a lot of things for you on Apple TV too.

From searching for shows and controlling their playback to looking for apps and finding your iPhone, here are some tips for how you can use Siri on Apple TV.

Using Siri on Apple TV

Make sure Siri is enabled

In order to use Siri on your Apple TV, you need to make sure it’s turned on.

Open your Settings on Apple TV, select General, that then click Siri if it shows Off.

If you cannot use Siri on your Apple TV, make sure that you own a supported Apple TV and select a supported language and country or region.

Access Siri on Apple TV

Asking Siri for help on Apple TV is easy. Hold down the Microphone (Siri) button on your remote, tell Siri what you want, and then release the button.

You’ll then see your results displayed on the screen.

Ways you can use Siri on Apple TV

Starting with the most popular types of requests, you can ask Siri to find you a show or movie to watch.

Find shows or movies

If you have a specific show or movie in mind, you can ask Siri to find it using the title.

You can say things like, “I want to watch The Shining” or “Find The Shining”.

If Siri finds an exact match, you’ll see it open in a corresponding app like TV. If Siri finds a few possible matches, you’ll see those displayed and can simply choose one.

Another way to find shows to watch is by genre, actor, cast, age, or time period. Plus, you can narrow down your results.

For example, I told Siri, “I want to watch a comedy” and Siri complied by giving me a few options.

Then I said, “from the 90’s” and once more Siri complied and showed me narrowed down options.

Here are just some other suggestions:

“Find movies for kids.”

“What are the new movie releases?”

“Show me trending TV shows.”

“Find TV shows from the 80’s.”

You can try many other types of requests for shows too. And like on your other devices, if Siri cannot complete your request, you’ll find out!

Control show playback

While you’re watching a show or movie on Apple TV, you can ask Siri for some help. Ask about show details, for a recap, or to move forward or back.

“Who stars in this show?”

“How long is this movie?”

“Fast forward five minutes.”

“Enable closed captioning.”

“What did she say?”: This will rewind the show so that you hear the dialog again and display a closed caption of it.

Search for apps in the App Store

Similar to shows and movies, you can ask Siri to find you an app in the App Store. And again, like shows or movies, you can use the specific title or search by genre, age, company, or even free apps.

Here, I asked Siri to find trending games to play.

Open an app

If you have an app that you want to open, rather than navigate and search your Apple TV, just ask Siri.

You can say things like “Open Photos,” “Go to my weather,” or “Open Settings”. Siri will either open the app or show you options to choose from, like with my request for weather apps below.

Find your devices

If you have the Find My app enabled for your devices, Siri on Apple TV can help you find them. Ask, “Where’s my Mac” or “Play a sound on my iPhone.”.

How to use siri to search your photos by date or location

Check the weather

You can get your current conditions with requests like, “How hot is it outside” or “Is it going to rain today” or ask Siri for the upcoming forecast with, “What’s the weather for this week”.

If you’re planning on traveling, you can ask Siri for weather in other locations too. Try, “What’s the temperature in Paris, France” or “Is it raining in L.A.”.

Catch a video on YouTube

Siri can also help you find some videos to watch on YouTube which saves you time from searching yourself.

“Find cooking lessons on YouTube.”

“Search YouTube for cute puppies.”

“Find funny falls on YouTube.”

Whatever it is that makes you laugh or maybe even cry, if it’s on YouTube, Siri should be able to help!

Check on sports or stocks

If you’re a sports fan, you can ask Siri for a team schedule, details on a particular player, or the latest scores.

And for you finance fanatics, you can ask Siri things like “How’s Apple’s stock today,” “How’s the Dow Jones doing” or “Where’s NASDAQ right now”.

Wrapping it up

With all of these types of things you can use Siri for on Apple TV, it certainly isn’t the end of the list. You can ask Siri for general information, hear a joke, and much more, like you would on your other devices.

To get additional suggestions, click the Microphone (Siri) button on your remote once and release. And just wait a few seconds. Siri will start showing you things you can ask for and commands you can give.

Are you going to spend a little more time with Siri on your Apple TV? Let us know the types of requests and commands you find to be the most helpful!

Privacy is a fundamental human right. At Apple, it’s also one of our core values. Your devices are important to so many parts of your life. What you share from those experiences, and who you share it with, should be up to you. We design Apple products to protect your privacy and give you control over your information. It’s not always easy. But that’s the kind of innovation we believe in.

Apple’s security layers and the App Review protect users and keep them in control of their data.

Your data.

App Tracking Transparency lets you control which apps are allowed to track your activity across other companies’ apps and websites.

Everyday apps. Designed for your privacy.

Safari throws trackers off your trail.

Intelligent Tracking Prevention helps stop advertisers that follow you from site to site.

close More about Safari

Safari

Some websites allow hundreds of different data collection companies to watch you, build a profile of you, and serve you ads as you browse the web. Intelligent Tracking Prevention in Safari uses on-device machine learning to help block those trackers. And you can get a snapshot of all the cross-site trackers Safari is blocking by visiting your Privacy Report in the Safari toolbar.

Advertisers can also create a “fingerprint” of your device to target you based on characteristics like your browser configuration, and fonts and plug-ins you’ve installed. To help prevent this, Safari has built-in fingerprinting defense, which shares a simplified system profile with websites you visit. Making it even more difficult for data companies to identify you.

Maps makes your location history, history.

The Maps app doesn’t associate your data with your Apple ID, and Apple doesn’t keep a history of where you’ve been.

close More about Maps

Where you go says a lot about you. Maps delivers a great experience without Apple knowing which stores, neighborhoods, or clinics you visit. And because Maps doesn’t include a sign-in, where you go isn’t associated with your Apple ID at all.

Personalized features, like locating your parked car, are created right on your device. Data used to improve navigation, such as routes and search terms, is not associated with your identity. Instead, that information is based on random identifiers that are constantly changing.

Photos protects your images from unwanted exposure.

The Photos app uses machine learning to organize photos right on your device. So you don’t need to share them with Apple or anyone else.

close More about Photos

Photos

Your photo and video albums are full of precious moments, friends, and your favorite things. Apple devices are designed so those memories don’t leave your hands until you share them.

Some services process photos in the cloud, which gives them access to your photos. But we designed Photos to process your images right on your Mac, iPhone, and iPad. In fact, the Apple Neural Engine with the A13 and A14 Bionic chips performs over 100 billion operations per photo to recognize faces and places without ever leaving your device. And when apps request access to your photos, you can share just the images you want — not your entire library.

Messages are only seen by who you send them to.

Apple can’t read your iMessages while they’re being sent between you and the person you’re texting.

close More about Messages

Messages

From inside jokes to invitations, a lot of life happens in text and video chats. Every blue-bubble message, picture, Animoji, and video is encrypted while being sent between devices.

Smart suggestions in Messages, like pulling up photos to send based on who you’re messaging, are all done on your device.

Siri learns what you need. Not who you are.

Your Apple ID isn’t connected to Siri, and your requests are associated with a random identifier. Not you.

close More about Siri

Siri was designed from the beginning to learn your preferences without sharing your identity with Apple or anyone else. You don’t sign in with your Apple ID to use Siri, and your device processes as much information as possible without sending it to Apple’s servers.

When Apple does process or store data on our servers, it’s associated with a random identifier — a long string of letters and numbers. That data is used only to improve Siri, and we never share or sell it. Apple doesn’t retain audio of your requests unless you choose to share it with us to improve Siri.

Apple News leaves what you read off the record.

Apple News delivers content based on your interests, but it isn’t connected to your identity. So Apple doesn’t know what you’ve read.

close More about Apple News

Apple News

Many news sources keep track of your identity and create a profile of you. Apple News delivers personalized content without knowing who you are. The content you read is associated with a random identifier, not your Apple ID.

You get editor-curated content and a personalized newsfeed so you can stay up to date with the latest news and stories. And because Apple News uses machine learning, the more you use it, the better your app gets to know what you like — without Apple ever knowing what you’re into.

Wallet and Apple Pay help hide what you buy.

Your credit and debit card numbers are hidden from Apple, and Apple doesn’t keep transaction information that can be tied back to you.

close More about Wallet and Apple Pay

Wallet & Apple Pay

What you buy, where you bought it, and how much you paid is sensitive information. Apple doesn’t store, sell, or use that information.

Apple doesn’t store your credit or debit card numbers or share them with merchants. Instead, a unique Device Account Number is created every time you add a card to Apple Pay. And with Apple Card, your spending history is generated right on your iPhone, so only the bank has that history.

Health keeps your records under wraps.

You control which information goes into the Health app and who you share it with.

close More about Health

Health

From your heart rate to your menstrual cycle, apps and devices for your health can give you insight into some of your most personal details. With the Health app, you’re in charge of what information you’d like to include, what not to, and who has access to it.

All of your data is encrypted and only accessible with your passcode, Touch ID, or Face ID. So however you use the Health app, you’re always in control of your data.

App Store shows you what’s in store for your data.

Easy-to-read privacy labels on the App Store help you choose apps based on how they use your data and whether they track you.

close More about App Store

App Store

Every one of the more than 1.8 million apps on the App Store is required to follow strict privacy guidelines and report how it uses your data. And every app is rigorously reviewed by a team of experts at Apple.

When you’re checking out an app, you’ll see its privacy label to help you decide if it works for you. Apps you choose to download need your permission to access information like your photos or location — and you can always change your mind about what you share. iOS 14.5 and iPadOS 14.5 or later require developers to get your permission before tracking your activity across other companies’ apps and websites for ads or data brokers.

Pic2Map is an online EXIF data viewer with GPS support which allows you to locate and view your photos on Google Maps™. Our system utilizes EXIF data which is available in almost all photos taken with digital cameras, smartphones and tablets. Even without GPS data, Pic2Map still serves as a simple and elegant online “EXIF” data viewer; which is short for Exchangeable Image File, a format that is a standard for storing interchange information in digital photography image files using JPEG compression. Depending on the brand and model of the camera; EXIF data includes information such as; shutter speed, exposure compensation, F number, ISO speed, flash usage, date and time the image was taken, whitebalance, auxiliary lenses that were used and resolution. Below, you can find a more detailed listing of all data Pic2Map provides.

If the recording device has a built-in GPS receiver and geotagging was enabled; it is also possible to extract the coordinates where the image was taken. This data includes but not limited to the latitude, longitude, altitude and direction information. Pic2Map photo mapper will analyze all this information to pinpoint the location on map and reverse geocode the coordinates to a detailed address if possible.

How to use siri to search your photos by date or location

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Apple iPhone 6s Plus at f/2.2, 1/2198 sec. ISO 25.

How to use siri to search your photos by date or location

Apple iPhone 6s Plus at f/2.2, 1/3344 sec. ISO 25.

How to use siri to search your photos by date or location

Apple iPhone 6s Plus at f/2.2, 1/4049 sec. ISO 25.

How to use siri to search your photos by date or location

Apple iPhone 6s Plus at f/2.2, 1/894 sec. ISO 25.

How to use siri to search your photos by date or location

SONY HDR-PJ260VE at f/3.4, 1/1000 sec. ISO 0.

How to use siri to search your photos by date or location

SONY HDR-PJ260VE at f/3.7, 1/1750 sec. ISO 0.

How to use siri to search your photos by date or location

SONY HDR-PJ260VE at f/3.4, 1/1750 sec. ISO 0.

How to use siri to search your photos by date or location

Apple iPhone SE at f/2.2, 1/2262 sec. ISO 25.