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Home»Home Internet»The Pixel 10 P’s AI Camera Coach Told Me How to Take Photos and Here Are the Results
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The Pixel 10 P’s AI Camera Coach Told Me How to Take Photos and Here Are the Results

Press RoomBy Press RoomSeptember 4, 2025No Comments8 Mins Read
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If you look through the camera roll on your phone, what kind of photos do you find? I see images of my friends, my pets, the odd receipt for a work expense and snapshots of coffee — hey, I was a barista for 11 years! Not every photo is meant to rival an Ansel Adams masterpiece. (Though I’m sure if he had a smartphone, he’d also take a pic of his parking space to remember where he parked his car.)

If you want to take better photos with your phone, Google has added a new tool to the Pixel 10 cameras that could help boost your skills. Camera Coach is powered by Gemini AI and serves up step-by-step instructions for different techniques: how to improve your framing, select the right lens and even hold the phone. Gemini doesn’t alter any of the images but merely acts as a guide, making you do all the work. 

What’s great is that you learn in the process. At a time when AI is everywhere, it’s nice to see Google use Gemini as a teaching tool. 

I haven’t seen a feature like Camera Coach on any other phone. To test whether this was another AI gimmick or something I’d use more than once, I took it around the streets of San Francisco. And I came away with a lot of great images that I’d say are keepers.


Don’t miss any of our unbiased tech content and lab-based reviews. Add CNET as a preferred Google source.


How to use Camera Coach

Camera Coach works on these phones:

  • Pixel 10
  • Pixel 10 Pro
  • Pixel 10 Pro XL
  • Pixel 10 Pro Fold

In the Camera app, frame your subject and, before you tap the shutter button, press the Camera Coach button at the top right (a camera icon with the plus sign). Next, an overlay pops up as your scene is scanned and analyzed. Gemini offers thematic suggestions specific to your composition. You choose one and then have distinct directions on what to do. Finally, you work your way through each step until you get to take the photo.

I was at a coffee shop and wanted to take a photo of an iced latte. After tapping the Camera Coach button, I got a “finding some options” message. Next, I could choose among several themes like “Iced Coffee Up Close” and “Coffee Drink and Table.” There was even a Rescan button in case I didn’t like the choices. I tapped Get Inspired, which offered artistic themes like “wooden table texture with drink” and “wide view of coffee shop interior.”

After opting for the wooden table and drink theme, I got a message that Gemini was “preparing how-to steps.” 

I did my best to follow each step. The first one asked me to switch to Portrait mode. A blue oval around the Portrait button showed me where to tap. Once I did, I pressed the arrow to see the next step. A few steps later, I was finally greeted with a “Take the photo” command. Once I was done, I tapped the X button to close Camera Coach.

The interface after taking a photo is a little convoluted. The preview of the photo you just took is on top of the viewfinder. To exit Camera Coach, there’s an X where the thumbnail for the last photo you took usually is. Since the process for using Camera Coach is considerably slow, this isn’t meant for photographing fast-moving subjects like sports.

Other than that, it’s incredibly intuitive to use. I like how each step explains the “why” behind it. If it asked me to zoom in, it also explained how it would make my subject more prominent in my photo. 

If you don’t like the themes Gemini suggests, you can always rescan your viewfinder. The Get Inspired option offers more artistic approaches, like this tight close-up image I took of someone wearing sunglasses with a sculpture reflected in the lenses.

Camera Coach results

I’m pleased with most of the photos I took under Camera Coach’s guidance. Some are slightly different approaches than I’d normally take, and others are perspectives that were new to me. In terms of identifying subjects and the scene in my viewfinder, Gemini did a decent job. Though once in a while, it would interpret things completely wrong, like when it said a basket of ginger root was a basket of peaches.

Sometimes the steps you go through to take a photo seem at odds. When I was taking a photo of a white building with palm trees, it wanted me to reframe the photo so that a parked car wasn’t in the foreground. But then the next step had me zooming out to show more of the white building, which put the car back into the shot. It felt like I was trying to make a lasagna, and the directions I was following were from two different recipes. Fortunately, this only happened some of the time.

Things to know about Camera Coach

After using the Pixel 10 Pro’s Camera Coach for 10 days, I learned that it has some strong preferences and dislikes. 

Camera Coach hates shadows

If you have a strong shadow in your image, it will suggest that you reframe the photo to remove it. This is great for those moments where your own shadow might enter your frame on a sunny day, but it did feel aggressive on occasion. For example, in the photo below of a service truck, Camera Coach wanted me to compose my shot so that the truck’s shadow didn’t appear. But the only way to do so would have been to stand in traffic on the other side of the vehicle. No dice.

Camera Coach doesn’t like parked cars

I live in San Francisco, and there are many cars parked on the street. More often than not, I was told to “remove the car” that was in the frame. I get it, Camera Coach wants you to block out as many distractions as possible. And most of the time, I was able to move a few feet and re-angle the phone so the car was out of the frame. But sometimes, there’s not enough sidewalk space to get into a position and change the composition.

Camera Coach isn’t fast

You should not use this to grab a photo of your kids or pets unless they’re sleeping. Camera Coach takes a couple of seconds, sometimes longer, to scan your composition and offer recommendations. Part of this seems affected by how strong your internet connection is.

After you choose the style you want from the recommendations, it can take another 5-10 seconds to complete the steps. Sometimes, it’d take me close to a minute before I got the “Take the photo” prompt. So Camera Coach isn’t designed for those times when you want to grab a quick shot with a dog hanging out the window of a passing car. 

But that slowness can be nice. It allowed me to pay attention to composition and really contemplate how I wanted to take a photo.

Camera Coach doesn’t have access to all cameras or modes

It’s neat to see that Camera Coach can be used on all of the rear cameras and even with Pro Res Zoom on the Pixel 10 Pro/10 Pro XL. But it doesn’t work with the selfie camera.

I like that it recommends changing modes, and a handful of times it had me switch to Portrait mode, for example. But it can’t access all of them. When I was taking a shot of San Francisco’s skyline, it walked me through the steps of taking a panorama photo, but it wouldn’t let me use Panorama mode. What’s the difference? Before phones and software like Photoshop, a panorama was an image that had a wide field of view and aspect ratio. Panorama mode on the Pixel can create gorgeous panoramic images by “stitching” together a series of images and blending them together. 

When the Camera Coach wanted me to take a panorama photo, I naturally went to select that mode but was unable to. My guess is that the two interactive interfaces don’t play well together. Disregarding Camera Coach, I grabbed this photo with the phone’s Panorama mode and was elated with the results.

Pixel 10 Camera Coach final thoughts

Google has done an incredible job making Camera Coach an easy-to-use tool. The primary audience isn’t professional photographers or hobbyists but folks who enjoy taking photos and want to learn more about technique. I can see amateurs becoming photography enthusiasts after using Camera Coach for some time.

As someone who got my first camera at age 6 and worked as a professional photographer in my adult years, I found Camera Coach to be a nice reminder of the basics. It forced me to be more thoughtful and deliberate about the images I take. 

I won’t become the next Ansel Adams with Camera Coach, but it made me appreciate his work and the techniques he used to create beautiful images before the age of AI — and always with film, large-format cameras and plenty of lenses and tripods. 

The Pixel 10 Pro XL Goes to Paris: Out of Hundreds of Photos, These Are My Favs

See all photos



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