Owner's Manual
Table Of Contents
- Quick Start Guide
- Camera User Manual
- Restoring Default Settings
- Q&A Index
- Table of Contents
- For Your Safety
- Notices
- Supplied Accessories
- Parts & Controls
- Getting to Know the Camera
- Camera Menus
- First Steps
- Basic Photography and Playback
- Live View Photography
- Movie Live View
- P, S, A, and M Modes
- User Settings: U1 and U2 Modes
- Release Mode
- Image Recording Options
- Focus
- ISO Sensitivity
- Exposure
- White Balance
- Image Enhancement
- Flash Photography
- Other Shooting Options
- More on Playback
- Connections
- Menu Guide
- Navigating the Menus
- The Playback Menu: Managing Images
- The Shooting Menu: Shooting Options
- Custom Settings: Fine-Tuning Camera Settings
- The Setup Menu: Camera Setup
- The Retouch Menu: Creating Retouched Copies
- My Menu/Recent Settings
- Technical Notes
- Troubleshooting
- Error Messages
- Specs
- Index
- Lens User Manual
- Scan of CD-ROM
- Warranty
37
s
Step 3: Frame the Photograph
1 Ready the camera.
When framing photographs in the viewfinder,
hold the handgrip in your right hand and cradle
the camera body or lens with your left.
Keep
your elbows propped lightly against your torso
for support and place one foot half a pace ahead
of the other to keep your upper body stable.
When framing photographs in portrait (tall)
orientation, hold the camera as shown in the
bottom of the three illustrations at right.
In j mode, shutter speeds slow when lighting is
poor; use of a tripod is recommended.
2 Frame the photograph.
Frame a photograph in the viewfinder with the
main subject in the AF area brackets.
A Using a Zoom Lens
Use the zoom ring to zoom in on the subject so that it fills a
larger area of the frame, or zoom out to increase the area
visible in the final photograph (select longer focal lengths
on the lens focal length scale to zoom in, shorter focal
lengths to zoom out).
AF area brackets
Zoom in
Zoom out
Zoom ring