In honor of Bad Bunny’s electrifying performance at the Apple Music Super Bowl LX Halftime Show, we toured Puerto Rico with photographer (and frequent Bad Bunny collaborator) Eric Rojas. Here we share the apps that helped us capture the island in all its beauty.
In this story:
1. Make colors pop
2. Capture action in stunning clarity
3. Preserve your unique glow
4. Warm up your sunsets
5. Bring on the night
1. Make colors pop

Where we shot: Old San Juan, known for its iconic colonial houses and cobblestone streets.
Our focus: Letting a colorful slushie shine.
The app for the task: Like many photo editors, Darkroom lets you adjust saturation and brightness—but with the app’s one-tap masks, you can easily apply those edits only to specific parts of your image, like the subject, background, or even a color range. We used it to accentuate the neon greens and electric yellows of a piragua, Puerto Rico’s classic shaved-ice treat.
2. Capture action in stunning clarity

Where we shot: The famed Vega Baja beach, midday.
Our focus: Crisp detail for every sandy kick.
The app for the task: Pro Camera II by Moment’s manual controls make it easy to dial shutter speed on the fly—which is crucial for photographing fast-moving objects in bright light.
To snap the photo above, we cranked the shutter speed up to 1/2000 to freeze the kick (as well as the airborne grains of sand). The app’s live exposure meter and four exposure-priority modes let us decide what to prioritize in the moment.


3. Preserve your unique glow

Where we shot: Vega Baja, Bad Bunny’s hometown.
Our focus: Selfies that accurately represent a range of skin tones.
The app for the task: The Camera app’s Photographic Styles do more than intelligently adjust specific colors in different parts of your photo to create a customized look. They also let you fine-tune color while preserving authentic skin tones.

4. Warm up your sunsets

Where we shot: Vega Baja beach at golden hour.
Our focus: Golden-hour sunsets that look as vivid as you remember.
The apps for the task: The pro camera Halide and photo editor Lightroom. Both support Apple ProRAW, a file format that gives you more flexibility when editing exposure, color, and white balance. This is key because sunsets can throw off a camera’s automatic white balance settings, skewing too cool or too warm.

5. Bring on the night

Where we shot: El Boricua club, in the Río Piedras neighborhood of San Juan, during the Monday of Plena.
Our focus: Low-light shots with flair.
The app for the task: By meticulously modeling Leica’s vintage lenses, Leica Lux replicates the signature look of the company’s legendary film cameras.

Don’t miss all the Bad Bunny playlists on Apple Music highlighting the artist’s biggest hits, essential videos, and deep cuts, as well as set lists from recent tours.