LG could be planning a phone camera with no less than 16 lenses

LG V40 ThinQ

Dual-lens cameras on the back of smartphones? Pretty much par for the course now. Triple-lens cameras? Yeah we've seen those too. But 16 lenses packed inside one rear-facing camera? Now we're really talking, LG.

Newly filed patents spotted by LetsGoDigital suggest LG is at least thinking about cramming 16 lenses into a camera in the future, which we guess would make it a hexa-camera. Apparently, with a curved setup, these 16 lenses could capture a photo from several different perspectives, and even simulate movement from a still image.

It would also make it easier to replace objects in photos, as per the patent documents, because the phone would be able to capture more information about them in three dimensions rather than just two. Some pretty cool effects might be possible.

  • Looking for Cyber Monday smartphone deals? We're tracking them live

16 is the new 2

The patent goes on to detail how a mirror and a flash could be placed separately on the back of a phone carrying a hexa-lens camera – to illuminate subjects and to make it easier to take selfies using the rear-facing camera rather than the front-facing one.

As always with patent filings like this, it's not a guarantee that we'll ever see an LG smartphone sporting 16 lenses on its rear-facing camera – a lot of patented ideas never make it to actual products. But it is a sign that LG has something like this on the drawing board that it would like to develop further.

In the meantime, we're stuck with cameras with two, three or maybe five lenses. It looks as though cameras – and camera lenses – could soon become an even more important consideration when it comes to choosing a new smartphone in the future.

Via Ice Universe

TOPICS
David Nield
Freelance Contributor

Dave is a freelance tech journalist who has been writing about gadgets, apps and the web for more than two decades. Based out of Stockport, England, on TechRadar you'll find him covering news, features and reviews, particularly for phones, tablets and wearables. Working to ensure our breaking news coverage is the best in the business over weekends, David also has bylines at Gizmodo, T3, PopSci and a few other places besides, as well as being many years editing the likes of PC Explorer and The Hardware Handbook.

Latest in LG Phones
LG V50 ThinQ
LG’s phone business is dead, but its phones are still getting Android 12
LG Wing 5G
LG has reportedly made its last smartphone
Pile of smartphones
Do you remember your first phone? We look back on our early mobiles
LG Velvet
LG’s Android phones will get three years of updates
LG phones
LG's smartphone legacy: every LG flagship Android phone
LG Wing 5G
Some LG phones will get Android 12
Latest in News
Apple's Craig Federighi demonstrates the iPhone Mirroring feature of macOS Sequoia at the Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) 2024.
Report: iOS 19 and macOS 16 could mark their biggest design overhaul in years – and we have one request
Lego Mario Kart – Mario & Standard Kart set on a shelf.
Lego just celebrated Mario Day in the best way possible, with an incredible Mario Kart set that's up for preorder now
TCL QM7K TV on orange background
TCL’s big, bright new mid-range mini-LED TVs have built-in Bang & Olufsen sound
Apple iPhone 16e
Which affordable phone wins the mid-range race: the iPhone 16e, Nothing 3a, or Samsung Galaxy A56? Our latest podcast tells all
Homepage of Manus, a new Chinese artificial intelligence agent capable of handling complex, real-world tasks, is seen on the screen of an iPhone.
Manus AI may be the new DeepSeek, but initial users report problems
Google Maps
Nightmare Google Maps glitch is deleting timelines, and there isn't a fix yet