When we first covered the Moment Lens in August, we had no idea it would spark such heated debate.
The series of smartphone lenses attach and detach with a simple twist, and the shots we took with it鈥攅specially with the telephoto and zoom鈥攃ame out crisper, requiring less editing before posting. But many readers still argued that all photos should be taken with something more powerful and sophisticated than a smartphone.
And that鈥檚 precisely not the point.聽
The point is that everyone鈥攊ncluding almost every professional photographer we know鈥攕hoots more with their phones than with any other single camera, precisely because the phone is the one device we all have with us constantly. Take , who鈥檚 done entire photo shoots using only his iPhone, in part to prove that it鈥檚 possible.
Now Moment has launched a phone case that will take smartphone photography to the next level. The case 鈥渒nows鈥 when you鈥檙e taking pictures (we鈥檒l explain in a bit), and, at least theoretically, we think it鈥檚 an idea that鈥檚 long overdue.

Before we get to the case, you need to understand the two main drawbacks of the Moment Lens: attaching and re-attaching lenses to the smartphone takes time, and in that time you often lose the 鈥渕oment鈥 you were trying to capture. Secondly, the attachment system isn鈥檛 robust, so you have to be careful with it if when the lens is attached to your phone. 聽
The Moment Case is designed to solve both of these problems鈥攖he mount is far more robust, so you can leave lenses in place without babying the system.聽But then Moment went much further.
Probably the case鈥檚 niftiest feature is its shutter button that, like a traditional point-and-shoot or DSLR, has a half-press feature to lock exposure and subject. This means you can shift the center of the frame without shifting focus from your subject. Yes, there are apps that offer the same functionality, but none of them are as easy to operate as this new case, and all require a tap on the screen, which means losing the stability of a two-handed grip. And most of these apps won鈥檛 hold that specific focus/exposure for more than a second, which is often too short to compose a shot.聽
Moment also says their case 鈥渒nows鈥 not only when you鈥檝e attached a lens, but which kind of lens you鈥檙e using (wide, telephoto, etc.) and will auto-launch the Moment app.聽
Designers created a case with a grip on the shutter side, opposite the lens, so that photographers will have better balance if they鈥檙e shooting one-handed. (Another drawback of the Moment lens is that it鈥檚 made out of glass. This is great for crisp shooting, but makes balancing the phone difficult.)
Finally, Moment also included a way to attach a camera strap, which should come in handy on skiing, rock climbing, or paddling adventures.
So no, this doesn鈥檛 change the debate. Frankly, many of us should shoot with better cameras than our smartphones. And smartphone’s should come spec鈥檇 with better lenses. But since we don鈥檛 and they don’t, we鈥檙e bullish on the Moment Lens and the Moment Case.
Check out the , which launched Wednesday.聽