When I had a kit lens (the one that came with my camera body) on my old canon, the lowest it went was f3.5. This made it very difficult for me to use in low lighting situations such as indoor shots. Also, with an aperture that high you are less likely to get a blurry back...
I use back focus button, assign to one of the back button and press, focus and keep it pressed while shooting. It works if subject just moves a little. Not sure about moving in bigger distances... k-aus https://www.alantan-fotography.com ...
Manual says that in “manual mode” , with iso set to auto with shutter button pressed I should be able to adjust exposure compensation with control ring, but it doesn’t work, doesn’t adjust the compensation. It works when I set to manual focus though. Any ...
Single or continuous shooting:Found on a main wheel next to the viewfinder, under Q, or by pressing your main Menu button depending on the age and model of your Canon, you can select your shooting mode. You can choose single shots or continuous shooting. For example, clicking the main 's...
What is F-Stop on a Camera (And How to Use it) How to Set Aperture Properly Adjusting the aperture allows you to adjust the image’s depth of field to focus on an object while keeping the background slightly blurred. This gives your image a crisp, professional effect, but it’s highly...
With the subject sitting in one place, single servo would work fine. That said, I actually have my camera set to continuous focus all the time, because I always use back button focus. It’s just personal preference. Single servo AF for focusing on still subjects ...
and there is no wind, (all stabilization off, use 2-sec timer!) …you should be able to see 1.) what truly PERFECT focus should look like, (using the manually focused image as a reference) …and, 2.) where your autofocus is front-focusing or back-focusing, if that is the case…...
, the camera will handle everything for you, including setting the shutter speed, aperture, and ISO. It will also often pick the focus point, and may fire the flash if you have one. Auto is designed so you just have to point the camera at your subject and press the shutter button....
Back-of-the-body controls AF Point Selection/Magnify button: The left button on the top right of the camera's back, when you use certain advanced shooting modes, you press this button to specify which of the nine auto-focus points you want the camera to us...
I have an A7 and have never used this button/switch. I read the manual but it just says that it's auto focus, manual focus, and auto exposure lock. Can someone actually describe or explain to me what this button/switch actually does and how I might actually use it in the real world...