Work with the main object
If you have an iPhone with the operating system iOS 16 and later, you can use the function of working with the main object in Photos. Open the photo you want to work with. Hold your finger on the main object in the photo and then choose whether you want to copy it, cut it out, or perhaps move it to another application.
Transferring photo edits
Native Photos on the iPhone allow not only basic and slightly more advanced photo editing, but also copying of these edits or transferring them to another photo. First, make the necessary adjustments to the selected photo. Then in the upper right corner, click on the icon of three dots in the menu that appears, select Copy edits. Move to the second photo, tap again on the three dots icon in the upper right corner and tap on in the menu Embed edits.
Duplicate detection
Native Photos in iOS 16 and later also allow easy and quick detection of duplicates, which you can then merge or delete. How to do it? Simply launch native Photos and tap at the bottom of the screen Alba. Head all the way down into the section More albums, click on Duplicates, and then choose how to deal with the selected duplicates.
Lock photos
If you have an iPhone with iOS 16 or later, you also have even better tools to secure your photos in the Hidden album. Run it Settings and tap on Photos. In the section Alba then just activate the item Use Face ID.
Scroll through edit history
Newer versions of the iOS operating system also offer the possibility of repeating the last modification made, or, on the contrary, canceling the last step. When editing photos in the editor in the appropriate native application, just click on the forward or reverse arrow in the upper part of the display.
I would especially like to have a "camera" folder/album in the photos and shove the "latest" nonsense where all the photos are stuffed into a comp. This is the thing that has bugged me about iOS since the beginning.