sony a700 photography
Transcription
sony a700 photography
Cover AA30470C A Short Course in Sony A700 Photography Dennis P. Curtin ShortCourses.com h t t p :// w w w . s h o r t c o u r s e s . c o m Short Courses Publishing Company Short Courses Books and Web Site S hort Courses is the leading publisher of digital photography books, textbooks, and guides to specific cameras from Canon, Sony, Nikon, Olympus and others. All of these books are available on-line from the Short Courses bookstore at: http://www.shortcourses.com/store/ All recent books are available in both black & white printed and full-color eBook (PDF) versions available on CDs or as instant downloads. The list of books we’ve published is rapidly expanding so be sure to visit the store to see if there is a book on your camera. If you find any errors in this book, would like to make suggestions for imhttp://www.photocourse.com/itext/pdf/PDFguide.pdf Click to view a PDF document describing how to use this eBook. provements, or just want to let me know what you think I welcome your feedback. ShortCourses.com 16 Preston Beach Road Marblehead, Massachusetts 01945 E-mail: denny@shortcourses.com Web site: http://www.shortcourses.com To learn more about digital photography visit our two Web sites: • http://www.shortcourses.com is our consumer site. • http://www.photocourse.com is our instructor/student site. © Copyright 2007 by Dennis P. Curtin. All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America. Except as permitted under the United States Copyright Act of 1976, no part of this publication may be reproduced or distributed in any form or by any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system, without the prior written permission of the publisher. N ote on the S hort C ourses . com W eb S ite This book is designed to work with the many of the free on-line book’s available at the author’s Web site at www.shortcourses.com. Of special interest http://www.photocourse.com/itext/copyright/circ01.pdf may be the books on displaying & sharing your digital photos, digital photogClick to view a PDF raphy workflow, image sensors and digital desktop lighting. document on how copyright law protects photographers and other artists. • Discussion Forum is the place to discuss what’s exciting or bothering you as long as it’s related to digital photography. Click to visit • Bookstore is the home of printed copies, ebooks on CDs, and instant downloads of digital photography books published by Short Courses. Click to visit • Curtin’s Guide to Digital Cameras and Other Photographic Equipment is a guide to choosing a digital camera and understanding its features. Includes coverage of camera bags, tripods, lighting equipment and much more. Click to visit • Using Your Digital Camera clearly explains everything you need to know about using your camera’s controls to capture great photos. Click to visit • Displaying & Sharing Your Digital Photos discusses what digital photography is all about including printing your images as prints or books, displaying them on-screen, and moving beyond the still image into exciting new areas. Click to visit ISBN 1-928873-81-2 ii For more on digital photography, visit http://www.shortcourses.com ShortCourses Books and Web Site • Digital Photography Workflow covers everything from getting ready to take photos to storing, organizing, managing and editing your images. Click to visit • Image Sensors, Pixels and Image Sizes describes key concepts such as resolutions, aspect ratios and color depths that have a huge impact on your photographs. Click to visit • Digital Desktop Lighting is a guide to low-cost tabletop photography equipment and the techniques used to photograph products and other small objects for eBay, Web sites, catalogs, ads and the like. Click to visit • Hot Topics/About Us points you to some of the newer or more interesting parts of the site, explains how to navigate the site, recommends other sites, and tells you a little about who we are and how to contact us. Click to visit This is the home page of the ShortCourses Web site at www. shortcourses.com Tip • When you visit our site be sure to sign up for our newsletter. It’s only used by us and only occasionally. It’s also very easy to unsubscribe. EDUCATORS Short Courses books have always been popular as textbooks in digital photography courses. If you are an instructor, you should know that special pricing is available for classroom use. For details on using this and other texts in the classroom, please call us at 781631-8520, Boston, Massachusetts USA time. For more on digital photography, visit http://www.shortcourses.com iii Preface Preface A great photograph begins when you recognize a great scene or subject. But recognizing a great opportunity isn’t enough to capture it; you also have to be prepared. A large part of being prepared involves understanding your camera well enough to capture what you see. Getting you prepared to see and capture great photographs is what this book is all about. It doesn’t matter if you are taking pictures for business or pleasure, there’s a lot here to help you get better results and more satisfaction from your photography. To get better, and possibly even great photographs, you need to understand both concepts and procedures; the “whys” and “hows” of photography. • Concepts of photography are the underlying principles that apply regardless of the camera you are using. They include such things as how sharpness and exposure affect your images and the way they are perceived by viewers. Understanding concepts answers the “why” kinds of questions you might have about photography. The Sony A700 is a full-featured SLR with a built-in flash and interchangeable lenses. The camera is compatible with a wide range of accessories. The logo for Sony’s Alpha digital SLR cameras and accessories. • Procedures are those things specific to one kind of camera, and explain step-by-step how you set your camera’s controls to capture an image just the way you want to. Understanding procedures gives you the answers to the “how” kinds of questions you might have. This book is organized around the concepts of digital photography because that’s how photographers think. We think about scenes and subjects, highlights and shadows, softness and sharpness, color and tone. The procedures you use with the Sony A700 camera are integrated throughout the concepts, appearing in those places where they apply. This integrated approach lets you first understand the concepts of photography and then see step by step how to use the A700 in all kinds of photographic situations. To get more effective, interesting, and creative photographs, you only need to understand how and when to use a few simple controls on your camera such as focus, exposure controls, and flash. If you’ve previously avoided understanding these controls and the profound impact they can have on your images, you’ll be pleased to know that you can learn them on a weekend. You can then spend the rest of your life marveling at how the infinite variety of combinations they provide make it possible to convey your own personal view of the world. You’ll be ready to keep everything in a scene sharp for maximum detail or to blur some or all of it for an impressionistic portrayal. You’ll be able to get dramatic close-ups, freeze fast action, create wonderful panoramas, and capture the beauty and wonder of rainbows, sunsets, fireworks, and nighttime scenes. As you explore your camera, be sure to have fun. There are no “rules” or “best” way to make a picture. Great photographs come from using what you know to experiment and try new approaches. Digital cameras make this especially easy because there are no film costs or delays. Every experiment is free and you see the results immediately so you can learn step by step. This book is about getting great pictures, not about connecting your camera to your computer and using your software. That information is well presented in the user guide that came with your camera. Be sure to visit our Web site at www.shortcourses.com for even more digital photography information. iv For more on digital photography, visit http://www.shortcourses.com Contents Contents Cover...i Short Courses Books and Web Site...ii Note on the ShortCourses.com Web Site—ii Preface...iv Contents...v Chapter 1 Camera Controls and Creativity...7 The A700 Camera...8 Jump Start—Using Auto Adjustment Mode...9 Good Things to Know...10 Using the Viewfinder...12 Eye-start AF—12 Information Display—12 AF Areas and Focus Indicator—12 Diopter Adjustment—12 Using Buttons and Dials...13 Top View —13 Rear View—14 Using Monitor Information and Quick Navi Screen...15 Information Display—15 Quick Navi Screen—15 Using Menus to Change Settings...16 Playing Back & Managing Your Images...18 Auto Review—18 Image Playback—18 Image Information Display—18 Using Folders—18 Using the Playback 1 Menu...20 Using the Playback 2 Menu...21 Selecting Image Quality and Size...22 Number of Pixels—22 How An Image is Captured—24 The Exposure—24 It’s All Black and White After All—24 Select an Image Quality—25 Selecting an Image Size—26 Selecting an Aspect Ratio—26 Selecting an Image Quality—27 Choosing a Format—27 Chapter 2 Controlling Exposure...29 Understanding Exposure...30 The Shutter Controls Light and Motion...31 The Aperture Controls Light and Depth of Field...33 Using Shutter Speed and Aperture Together...35 Exposure—Faucets & Buckets Analogy—36 Exposure—Seesaw Analogy—37 Retaining Highlight and Shadow Details ...38 Choosing Recording Modes...39 Using Scene Selection Modes...40 Using Program AE (P) Mode & Program Shift...41 Using Shutter-Priority (S) Mode...42 Using Aperture-Priority (A) Mode...43 Using Manual (M) Mode & Manual Shift...44 How Your Exposure System Works...45 Meter Averaging and Middle Gray—45 Types of Metering—47 When Automatic Exposure Works Well...48 When to Override Automatic Exposure...49 Scenes Lighter than Middle Gray—49 Scenes Darker than Middle Gray—50 Subject Against a Very Light Background—50 Subject Against a Very Dark Background—51 Scenes with High Contrast—51 Hard to Meter Scenes—52 How Overriding Autoexposure Works...53 How to Override Automatic Exposure...54 Exposure Compensation—54 Autoexposure (AE) Lock—54 Autoexposure Bracketing (AEB)—56 Using Histograms...58 Displaying Histograms—58 Evaluating Histograms —58 Clipped Pixels—60 Sample Histograms—61 Chapter 3 Controlling Sharpness...62 Getting Sharper Pictures...63 Supporting the Camera—63 Using the Self-timer/Remote Commander—63 Super SteadyShot—64 Camera Shake Warning Indicator—65 Changing the ISO—65 Sharpness Isn’t Everything...66 How to Photograph Motion Sharply...67 Speed of Subject—67 Direction of Movement—67 Distance to Subject and Focal Length of Lens—68 Focus and Depth of Field...69 Focus—69 Depth of Field—69 Checking Depth of Field—70 Focusing Techniques...71 The AF Illuminator—71 Selecting an Autofocus Mode—72 Selecting the AF Area—72 Using Focus Lock—73 Manual Focus—74 Using the AF/MF Button—74 Other Focusing Choices—74 Controlling Depth of Field...75 Using Deep Depth of Field...76 Using Shallow Depth of Field...78 Conveying the Feeling of Motion...79 For more on digital photography, visit http://www.shortcourses.com Contents Chapter 4Capturing Light & Color...80 Where Does Color Come From?...81 White Balance and Color...82 Using Preset White Balance Settings—82 Creating and Using a Custom White Balance Setting—83 Using a Specific Color Temperature—84 Using White Balance Bracketing—84 Color and Time of Day...85 Sunsets and Sunrises...86 Weather...88 Photographing at Night...90 The Direction of Light...92 The Quality of Light...94 Chapter 5 Understanding Lenses...95 Sony Lenses...96 Focal Length...98 Zoom Lenses...99 Normal Lenses...100 Wide-Angle Lenses...101 Telephoto Lenses...103 Macro Lenses and Accessories...105 Lens Accessories...107 Perspective in a Photograph...108 Chapter 6 Using Flash and Studio Lighting...109 How Flash Works...110 Using Autoflash...111 Flash Coverage and Range—111 Flash and Shutter Speeds—111 Flash Modes—111 Portraits with Flash...113 Positioning the Flash and Subjects—113 Red-eye—114 Using Fill Flash...115 Using Slow Sync Flash...116 Using Available Light...117 Controlling Flash Exposures...118 Flash Control Modes—118 Flash Exposure Compensation—118 Flash Exposure Bracketing (FEB)—119 Using an External Flash...120 High-speed Sync (FP)—120 Wireless Flash—121 Stroboscopic Flash—121 Flash Sync Terminal—121 Using Flash in Close-ups...122 Studio Lighting...123 Candidates for Studio Lighting—123 Lighting—123 Backgrounds—125 Focus and Exposure—125 Tips and Tricks—125 Portrait and Product Photography—Introduction...126 The Main Light...127 The Fill Light...128 The Background Light...129 The Rim Light...130 vi Chapter 7 Other Features and Commands...131 Continuous Photography...132 Using the D-Range Optimizer...133 Using Noise Reduction...134 Long Exposure Noise Reduction—134 High ISO Noise Reduction—134 Using Creative Styles...135 Basic Styles—135 Style Boxes—135 Adjustments—136 Selecting and Adjusting Creative Styles—136 Using MR (Memory Recall) Mode...138 Using the Custom Button...139 Using the Custom Menu...140 Custom 1 Menu—140 Custom 2 Menu—140 Custom 3 Menu—141 Custom 4 Menu—141 Using the Setup Menu...142 Setup 1 Menu—142 Setup 2 Menu—142 Setup 3 Menu—143 Entering a Print Order...144 Resetting Settings...145 Caring for Your Camera...146 Cleaning the Image Sensor—146 Cleaning the Camera and Lens—146 Protecting your Camera from the Elements— 147 Protecting when Traveling—147 Storing a Camera—148 Caring for yourself—148 For more on digital photography, visit http://www.shortcourses.com Chapter 1. Camera Controls and Creativity Chapter 1 Camera Controls and Creativity Contents • The A700 Camera • Jump Start: Using Auto Mode • Good Things to Know • Using the Viewfinder • Using Buttons and Dials • Using Monitor Information & Quick Navi Screen • Using Menus to Change Settings • Playing Back & Managing Your Images • Using the Playback 1 Menu • Using the Playback 2 Menu • Selecting Image Quality and Size For S erious digital cameras give you creative control over your images. They do so by allowing you to control the light and motion in photographs as well as what’s sharp and what isn’t. Although most consumer digital cameras are fully automatic, some allow you to make minor adjustments that affect your images. The best ones such as the Sony A700 offer interchangeable lenses, external flash connections, and a wide range of controls—more than you’d find on a 35mm SLR. However, regardless of what controls your camera has, the same basic principles are at work “under the hood.” Your automatic exposure and focusing systems are having a profound affect on your images. Even with your camera on fully automatic, you can indirectly control, or at least take advantage of the effects these systems have on your images. In this chapter, we’ll first explore your camera and how you use it on fully automatic mode. We’ll also see how you use menus and buttons to operate the camera, manage your images and control image quality. In the chapters that follow, we’ll explore in greater depth how you take control of these settings, and others, to get the effects you want. more on digital photography, visit http://www.shortcourses.com Chapter 1. Camera Controls and Creativity The A700 Camera Sony’s A700 camera’s lightweight, magnesium alloy body is dust and moisture resistant. It houses a 12.2 megapixel CMOS sensor capable of capturing 4272 x 2848 pixel images—large enough to make sharp 21 x 14 inch prints. The 3-inch LCD screen with 921K pixels not only lets you review your images but also lets you change settings. To help ensure sharp images, the camera has Super SteadyShot® built into the camera body so all compatible lenses are automatically image-stabilized. This allows you to use smaller apertures and faster shutter speeds without a tripod. The Sony DSLR-A700 is an SLR (singlelens reflex) camera so when you look in the viewfinder you are seeing the scene through the lens.Here the camera is attached to the optional vertical handgrip. The autofocus system has 11 sensors metering areas of the viewfinder called AF areas. You can manually select which of these areas is used for focusing, or let the camera select one automatically. Because the APS-C size image sensor is smaller than a frame of 35mm film, the camera has a 1.5x focal length conversion factor (a 100 mm lens will act like a 150mm lens when mounted on the camera) and is compatible with all Sony and most Minolta lenses. The camera captures images in the universal JPEG format but also offers the higher-quality RAW format. The maximum shutter speed is 1/8,000th of a second and you can shoot at up to five frames per second. In JPEG fine or standard mode, continuous shooting is limited only by the capacity of the media card (sold separately), while up to 18 frames can be captured in the http://www.photocourse.com/itext/SLR/ RAW format. Click this button to play an animation that shows how an SLR works when you compose an image and press the shutter button. In the Box • The A700 is available as a body only and in a kit with a lens. All versions include the camera body as well as a rechargeable battery pack (NP-FM500H), charger (BC-VM10), power cord, Wireless Remote Commander, USB cable, video cable, shoulder strap with eyepiece cover and Remote Commander clip, body cap, accessory shoe cap, eyecup, CD-ROM applications software, “Read this First” and “User’s Guide/Troubleshooting” booklets. The camera features fourteen creative styles, including night view, autumn leaves or vivid, which can be selected to enhance images. These effects can then be fine-tuned by adjusting contrast, saturation, sharpness, brightness and zone matching. Sony’s Dynamic Range Optimizer (DRO) function lets you choose the desired level of detail captured in areas of highlights and shadows. The advanced mode offers five levels of correction and DRO bracketing creates three images from a single capture with three different levels of optimization. There is an extensive array of customization options to personalize the camera to match shooting styles. The camera’s Quick Navi (quick navigation) display lets you change settings using a joy stick-like multi-selector and front or rear control dials. For additional customization you can store up to 28 camera settings in one of three user memories for instant recall and assign any one of 15 frequently-accessed functions to the Custom (C) button. The camera accepts Memory Stick and CompactFlash Type I/II cards compatible with the new Ultra Direct Memory Access standard for up to 300x write speeds. Using the supplied remote capture application, you can control the camera from a compatible PC via USB without even touching the camera, and files can be stored on the computer instead of the camera’s memory card. The camera includes an HDMI output for connection to HDTV sets, bringing the display of your images into the twenty-first century. The camera is sold as a body only or in the DSLR-A700K kit with an 18-70 mm lens and the DSLR-A700P kit with the 16-105 mm lens. For more on digital photography, visit http://www.shortcourses.com Jump Start—Using Auto Adjustment Mode Jump Start—Using Auto Adjustment Mode The A700’s Auto adjustment mode sets everything for you. All you have to do is frame the image and push the shutter button. This is a good mode to use in most situations because it lets you focus on the subject rather than the camera. • Selecting the mode. Slide the power switch on the back of the camera to ON and set the Mode Dial to AUTO. The Mode Dial with the Auto mode setting. • Framing the image. The viewfinder shows about 95% of the scene you are going to capture. If the image in the viewfinder is fuzzy, turn the diopter adjustment dial next to the viewfinder to adjust it (page 12). • Autofocus. The viewfinder displays 10 small bars and 1 small square called AF areas, which are used for focusing. (AF stands for autofocus.) When the AF area is set to Wide (the default) on the Recording 2 menu (page 72), the camera focuses on the closest subject covered by one or more of these areas. How close you can get to a subject depends on the minimum focusing distance of the lens you are using. The Power Switch set to ON. AF areas in the viewfinder Keep your eye on the focus indicator in the viewfinder. • Autoexposure. Multi segment metering (the default) divides the scene in the viewfinder into 40 segments and meters each of them to determine the best exposure for the scene (page 45). The shutter speed and aperture that will be used to take the picture are displayed in the viewfinder when the display is activated (page 12). • Autoflash. When the light is too dim in AUTO mode, you can raise the flash and it will fire only when needed. Press it down to close it when finished (page 111). The range of the flash varies depending on the aperture being used (page 111) but it’s maximum range is 40 feet (6.6 m). • Automatic white balance. The color cast in a photograph is affected by the color of the light illuminating the scene. The camera adjusts white balance so white objects in the scene look white in the photo (page 82). Taking a Picture in Auto Mode 1. With the Power Switch on the back of the camera set to ON, set the Mode Dial to AUTO and remove any lens cap. Check the positions of the Metering and Focus Mode Levers (left). 2. Compose the image in the viewfinder, making sure the area that you want sharpest is covered by one of the eleven AF areas. Turn the Metering Mode Lever to the icon shown here. 3. Press the shutter button halfway down and pause so the camera can automatically set focus and exposure. When its done so, it beeps, the round green focus indicator in the viewfinder glows, and the AF area used to set focus briefly flashes red. 4. Press the shutter button all the way down to take the picture. ● The shutter sounds, and the red access lamp on the back of the camera glows while the image is being stored. You can take another photo at any time. ● The image is displayed on the monitor for 2 seconds so you can review it, press Delete to delete it, or press DISP to change the display. Turn the Focus Mode Lever to S. For 5. When finished, slide the Power Switch to OFF and replace any lens cap. more on digital photography, visit http://www.shortcourses.com Chapter 1. Camera Controls Good Things to and Creativity Know When you first start taking photos with a new camera, it sometimes seems that there is too much to learn all at once. To simplify your getting started, here are some of the things you may want to know right off. • The first time you turn on the camera you are prompted to enter the date and time (page 142). It’s important that you do so, otherwise your images won’t be properly date and time stamped. The Focus Mode Lever selects one of three kinds of autofocus and manual focus. An icon on the monitor indicates which card is being used to store images. • If your camera is right out of the box you have to mount a lens (page 96), insert a charged battery pack, and insert a memory card on which to store your images. No memory card is included with the camera, and there may be no lens as part of the package. • The camera accepts Memory Stick, CompactFlash and Microdrive memory cards for image storage. When you use one or the other, you need to tell the camera where to save files by setting the Memory card setting on the Setup 2 menu to Memory Stick or CompactFlash (the default). To insert a memory card open the memory card cover on the side of the camera, insert the card with the label facing the back of the camera and the connectors facing inward then gently press it down to seat it. To remove a card, press and release a Memory Stick or press the CF eject lever. It’s a good idea to format a card (page 20) before you use it since every device that writes to disks has slight variations. • Never open the memory card cover when the access lamp is lit to indicate data is being written to it or read from the card. Doing so can corrupt image files. • When charging the battery, the charger’s light goes out when it’s fully charged, a process that can take up to 4 hours. Recharge batteries immediately before using them because they gradually loose their charge over time. • To insert a battery pack (use only NP-FM500H), press the battery cover open lever on the bottom of the camera, slide the battery in and close the cover. To remove a battery already in the camera, turn off the camera and push aside the lock lever to free the battery. Icons on the monitor show the status of the battery as full (top) through exhausted (bottom). The icons are accompanied by a percentage of charge remaining number. When Super SteadyShot is on this indicator uses bars to indicate the amount of camera shake—fewer are better. 10 • In warm temperatures you can shoot approximately 650 photos with a fully charged battery. This number decreases in colder temperatures, when you use flash or playback images, when you set the focus mode to Continuous AF (AF-C—page 72), or you frequently turn the camera on an off. • When you do not hold the camera’s grip and look through the viewfinder, or operate any camera controls for 5 seconds, the viewfinder and monitor displays turn off. If you don’t do those things for 3 minutes, the camera enters power save mode. In either case you can hold the camera’s grip and look through the viewfinder, or operate any camera control to wake up the camera display. • The number of remaining images that can be stored on the memory card at current settings is always displayed in the lowerright corner of the monitor when information is displayed. When the number gets to zero you can’t take any more photos unless you delete some or change memory cards. • The camera’s Super SteadyShot® function (page 64) lets you use slower shutter speeds and smaller apertures without getting blur in your images from camera movement. You can turn this on and off with the Super SteadyShot switch on the back of the camera. When on, a scale with five bars is For more on digital photography, visit http://www.shortcourses.com Good Things to Know displayed on the viewfinder. More bars indicates more pronounced camera shake. If the bars continue to flash, Super SteadyShot is not being used. The camera shake warning icon. • A camera shake warning icon is displayed when the camera thinks the shutter speed is to slow to prevent blur from camera movement. If this appears, select a faster shutter speed (page 31), use a tripod (page 63), turn on the flash (page 111), zoom out to a wider angle of view or turn on Super SteadyShot (page 64). • When you have to remove the lens cap or change lenses, be sure to do so in a wind and dust free environment. If you get dark spots in your images, you may have dust on the image sensor (page 146). • For some reason, one of the camera’s default settings lets you shoot pictures without a CF card in the camera. (Some people believe it’s so salespeople can demonstrate the camera without having to insert a memory card.) Images are even displayed on the monitor so you think you are capturing them, but they are not saved. To ensure you don’t take unsaved pictures, set the Release w/oCard setting on the Custom 2 menu (page 140) to Disable. • To take pictures hold the camera in your right hand while supporting the lens with your left. Brace the camera against your face as you look through the viewfinder and brace your elbows against your body. Press the shutter button slowly and smoothly as you hold your breath after breathing in deeply and exhaling. • The shutter button has two stages. When you press it halfway down, the camera sets focus and exposure. You pause for a moment as it does so, and then when the green focus indicator comes on in the viewfinder and the camera beeps, you press it the rest of the way to take the picture. If you press the shutter button all of the way down without pausing halfway, the photo may not always be in focus. The shutter button has two stages. When you press it halfway down, the camera sets focus and exposure. When you press it all the way down you take the picture. Tip • When wondering about all of the new features on your camera, it may be reassuring for you to know that almost all of the great photos over the past 150 years have been taken with cameras that only let you control the aperture, shutter speed and focus. For • If the camera can’t focus you can’t take a picture. For help on focusing see page 71. • You can use the camera’s monitor to review images you’ve taken (page 18) and adjust its brightness to match the light you’re viewing it in (page 15). • When you take a picture, it is displayed on the monitor for two seconds but you can extend the auto review time (page 140). While an image is displayed, you can press the Delete button (page 18) to delete it, or DISP to change the information displayed. • You can reset many camera settings to their factory defaults (pages 145). This is useful if you make changes and can’t remember how to undo them. • When photographing in a studio-like setting, cleaning the image sensor (page 146), or using the camera to give a slide show (page 21), you can use the optional AC Adapter/Charger AC-VQ900AM to power the camera instead of the battery pack. • Although you may not notice it, the focal length of your lens is longer than it would be on a 35mm film camera (page 98). • The camera’s firmware that operates the camera was initially version 1, but was then quickly updated to version 2. To see what version your camera is using, press the MENU button to display the menu, then press DISP. To see what the latest version is, visit http://esupport.sony.com. more on digital photography, visit http://www.shortcourses.com 11 Chapter 1. Camera Controls Using the and Creativity Viewfinder Tips • You can turn Eyestart on or off using the Eye-Start AF setting on the Custom 1 menu (page 140). • You can specify if you have to also be holding the grip using the EyeStart triger setting on the Custom 1 menu (page 140). When taking photos, you normally compose them in the viewfinder. Since the viewfinder is your center of interest when taking photos, it displays focus and exposure information to guide you. Eye-start AF The camera’s Eye Start AF feature uses sensors to tell when you are holding the camera’s grip and looking through the eyepiece. When doing both, the monitor turns off, the viewfinder display turns on, and the camera starts to autofocus. The viewfinder display and autofocus turn off, and the monitor turns on, if you stop looking through the viewfinder for 5 seconds unless you press the shutter button halfway down to lock focus (page 73). If it turns off, look through the viewfinder again or press the shutter button halfway down. Information Display When the viewfinder display turns on, it displays a spot metering circle, AF areas, and guidelines for images shot using the 16:9 aspect ratio. The bottom line displays a focus indicator, the current shutter speed and aperture, an exposure scale, and many other icons during various procedures. The viewfinder displays information about settings that affect the current photograph. AF Areas and Focus Indicator The 11 AF (autofocus) areas in the viewfinder determine which part of the scene is in sharpest focus. The one being used to set focus can be selected manually or automatically (page 72). When you press the shutter button halfway down, the AF area being used to set focus flashes red. Also displayed is a focus indicator that indicates the status of focusing as follows: When focus is achieved, the AF area used to set it flashes red, and the green focus indicator glows a steady green in the viewfinder. When you press the shutter button halfway down to focus, the focus indicator changes to indicate when (from left to right above) the camera is still focusing, the camera is focused or tracking a moving subject, focus is locked, or the camera can’t focus. (The last two indicators are the same, but one is flashing.) The diopter adjustment dial. 12 Diopter Adjustment You can adjust the sharpness of the viewfinder display, perhaps enough to read it without glasses. To do so, remove the lens cap and look through the viewfinder at a fairly bright light source (not the sun!). If the viewfinder display isn’t sharp, try to bring the AF areas into focus by turning the diopter adjustment dial next to the viewfinder. For more on digital photography, visit http://www.shortcourses.com Using Buttons Using Buttons and Tips • Blue icons on the camera’s body indicate button functions in playback mode. and Dials Dials The A700 has a number of buttons and dials that quickly change important settings without the time-consuming need to work your way through menus. Top View • You can quickly reset all camera settings to their original factory defaults (page 145). • You can connect the camera to a computer and operate it from there using a cable and software packaged with the camera. 1. Mode Dial selects recording modes (page 39). On the front of the camera is a depth of field preview button (page 70). 2. Front control dial cycles through settings on the Quick Navi screen (page 15), selects menu settings (page 16), shifts the shutter speed in Program (P) mode (page 41), and selects an aperture or shutter speed (pages 41–44). In playback mode, turning the dial scrolls you through pictures you’ve taken (page 18). 3. Shutter button wakes up the camera, turns on the viewfinder and monitor information display, and locks exposure and focus when pressed halfway down, and takes the photo when pressed all the way down. 4. Exposure Compensation button displays the exposure compensation scale in recording mode so you can lighten or darken the next image (page 54). 5. DRIVE button displays the drive screen so you can select single or continuous shooting (page 132), the self-timer or Remote Commander (page 63), or bracket exposure (page 56), white balance (page 84), or D-Range optimization (page 133). On the front of the camera is the lens release button (page 96) and the Focus Mode Lever (page 72). For 6. WB white balance button displays the white balance screen so you can select a preset white balance setting or store one of your own (page 82). 7. ISO button displays the ISO screen so you can set the desired ISO (page 65). more on digital photography, visit http://www.shortcourses.com 13 Chapter 1. Camera Controls Tip and Creativity Rear View • The front and rear control dials are laid out on the camera so you can turn the front dial with your index finger and the rear dial with your thumb. Sony refers to these (along with the Custom (C) button as exclusive buttons because they take you to a setting page dedicated exclusively to changing a specific setting. 1. Power switch turns the camera on and off. 2. MENU button displays and hides the menu on the monitor (page 16). 3. DISP button cycles you through information about camera settings in recording modes, or images in playback mode (page 15). 4. Delete button deletes the image displayed on the monitor (page 19). 5. Playback button displays the last image you captured (page 18). 6. Metering Mode Lever selects the metering mode (page 47). 7. AEL and Index button, inside the Metering Mode Lever, locks exposure (page 54), selects slow sync flash when the flash is raised (page 116), and toggles playback mode between single-image and index view (page 19). 8. AF/MF and Enlarge button switches the camera between autofocus and manual focus in recording modes (page 74) and toggles playback mode between single-image and enlarged view. Pressing the multiselector sideways highlights an item and pressing it straight down selects it. 9. Rear control dial cycles through settings on the Quick Navi screen (page 15), selects menu settings (page 16), shifts the aperture in Program (P) mode (page 41), selects an aperture or shutter speed (pages 41–44). In playback mode, turning the dial scrolls you through pictures you’ve taken (page 18). 10. Multi-selector, a small joy stick, can be pressed up, down, left or right or straight down to select menu items, Quick Navi screen settings (page 15), and AF areas (page 72), and scrolls among images or around an enlarged image in playback mode (page 19). You can use the Fn button to display the Quick Navi screen and change many of the displayed settings. 14 11. Custom and Histogram button executes the function you assign it (page 139) in record mode, and displays a histogram (page 58) in playback. 12. Super SteadyShot switch turns SteadyShot on and off (page 64). 13. Fn and Rotate button displays the Quick Navi screen (page 15) in record mode and rotates images (page 19) in playback. For more on digital photography, visit http://www.shortcourses.com Using Monitor Information Using Monitor Information The last line on the monitor tells you what buttons and dials are available at that particular point in a procedure. and and Quick Navi Screen Quick Navi Screen The monitor is used in both recording and playback modes. It turns on when you press the shutter button halfway down, and turns off if you don’t operate any controls or look through the viewfinder for 5 seconds. You can adjust the brightness of the monitor by holding down the DISP button until a brightness scale appears and then turn the front or rear control dial. You can also use the LCD brightness setting on Setup 1 menu (page 142). Information Display The monitor displays information in both recording and playback modes. In recording modes, you can press the DISP to cycle through no display, detailed display, and enlarged display. When you rotate the camera from a horizontal (landscape) orientation to a vertical (portrait) the display rotates. You can turn this rotation feature on or off using the Rec.info.disp setting on Custom 3 menu (page 140). The differences between the detailed and enlarged display are subtle. An arrowhead on a Quick Navi exclusive screen icon indicates the setting can be changed. Tip Settings you can change from the Quick Navi screen include: • Exposure (page 54) • AF area (page 72) • Drive (page 56, 63, 84, 132, 133) • White balance (page 82) • ISO (page 65) • D-Range Optimizer (page 133) • Creative Style (page 135) • Flash mode (page 111) • Flash compensation (page 118) • Image size and quality (page 27) Throughout this book, this icon means you can use the Fn button to change the setting being discussed. For Quick Navi Screen Pressing the Fn (Function) button switches you to the Quick Navi (quick navigation) screen where you can change settings. When the screen appears, you make setting changes as follows: • To highlight the setting to be changed so it’s displayed in orange, press the multi-selector so it’s displayed in orange. (Items displayed in gray cannot be changed because they are just information, set with levers on the camera body, not available in the current recording mode, or conflict with another setting.) • To change the highlighted setting you can turn the front control dial to scroll through the choices and the rear control dial to select options for the highlighted choice if any are available. Alternatively, you can press the multiselector straight down to display an exclusive display screen listing choices for the selected setting. (The DRIVE, WB, ISO, C (Custom) and Exposure compensation buttons take you directly to their respective exclusive display screens.) Once an exclusive display screen is displayed you can highlight any choice by pressing the multi-selector up or down or turning the front control dial. If a settings has one or more arrowheads, you can select versions of the setting by pressing the multi-selector left or right, or by turning the rear control dial. When ready, press the multi-selector straight down to select the setting and you are ready to shoot. You can change the creative style (page 135) and flash mode (page 111), but not from the enlarged display screen. To change them, press DISP to switch to the detailed display or use the settings on Recording 1 menu. more on digital photography, visit http://www.shortcourses.com 15 Chapter 1. Camera Controls Using Menus to Icons indicate (from left to right) Recording, Custom, Playback, and Setup menus. and Creativity Change Settings To change any setting, other than those set with the Mode Dial or levers on the camera body, you press the MENU button to display a series of menu icons across the top of the monitor. The settings listed below this icon bar are associated with the selected icon. The four types of menus you can display include: • The Recording menu lists settings that affect the image. • The Custom menu (page 140) lists settings that modify the way the camera’s controls work. • The Playback menu (page 20–21) manages images and slide shows. • The Setup menu (page 142) lists settings that adjust the way the camera operates. To charge settings from these menus you use the multi-selector to select a menu, a setting to change, and then a setting choice. Each menu is spread across up to four pages. When you highlight one of these icons, the menu’s pages, each of which is numbered, cascade out so you can select them. The last line below a menu reminds you to press the multi-selector to highlight and select settings, then press MENU to back up. • Instead of using the multi-selector to make menu choices you can turn the front control dial to select settings and the rear control dial to select menu pages. As you scroll past the first or last setting on a menu the previous or next menu is automatically displayed. • When a menu is displayed, pressing the shutter button halfway down instantly returns you to recording mode. • The last menu you viewed can be displayed the next time you press MENU using the Menu start setting on the Setup 3 menu. Using Menus 1. To display the menu, press the MENU button. 2. To display numbered menu pages, press the multi-selector left or right, or turn the rear control dial. These icons indicate you can use the front control dial (top) rear control dial (bottom), or both. 3. To highlight a setting you want to change, press the multi-selector up or down, or turn the front control dial. 4. To select a highlighted settings and display choices, press the multiselector straight down. (To backup at any point, press MENU before pressing the multi-selector straight down.) 5. To select one of the choices, repeat Steps 3–4. 6. To hide the menu, press the MENU or shutter button. 16 For more on digital photography, visit http://www.shortcourses.com Using Menus to Change Settings Recording 1 Menu Page The tinted settings in these tables are also available from the Quick Navi Screen. Command Settings Page Image size Sets image size 27 Aspect ratio Sets image aspect ratio 26 Quality Sets image quality 27 D-RageOptimizer Optimizes the tonal range in captured images 133 Creative Style Selects or creates creative styles 135 Custom button Assigns a function to the Custom (C) button 139 Exposure step Sets changes in exposure to 1/3 or 1/2 stops 32, 34 Page Recording 2 Menu Page Tip Command Settings • Whether you use the multi-selector or control dials to select menu items that appear on both is a personal choice. Flash mode Selects one of the flash modes 111 Flash control Selects type of flash control to be used 118 Flash compens. Adjusts flash exposures to make them lighter or darker 118 ISO Auto max. Sets the upper limit that will be selected by Auto ISO 65 ISO Auto min. Sets the lower limit that will be selected by Auto ISO 65 Recording 3 Menu Page Tip • When you do not hold the camera’s grip and look through the viewfinder, or operate any camera controls for 5 seconds, the viewfinder and monitor displays turn off. If you don’t do those things for 3 minutes, the camera enters power save mode. In either case you can hold the camera’s grip and look through the viewfinder, or operate any camera control to wake up the camera display. For Command Settings Page AF-A setup Sets A on Focus Mode Lever to AF-A or DMS 72 AF area Specifies how AF areas are selected for focusing 72 Priority setup Specifies if camera must be in focus to shoot 74 AF illuminator Turns the AF illuminator on or off 71 AF w/shutter Specifies if the camera autofocuses when you press the shutter button halfway down 74 Long exp. NR Turns noise reduction for long exposures on or off 134 High ISO NR Turns noise reduction for high ISO settings on or off 134 Recording 4 Menu Page Command Settings Page Memory Store settings in memory so they can be accessed in the MR recording mode 138 Rec mode reset Resets P, A, S and M modes 145 When you change a menu item, you can always use the same procedure to restore the setting. However, there are ways to reset a number of changes at once. These are discussed on page 145. more on digital photography, visit http://www.shortcourses.com 17 Chapter 1. Camera Controls and Creativity Playing Back & Managing Your Images Tips • After zooming an image or displaying information, you can turn the front control dial to scroll through other images using the same settings. • To immediately return to recording mode, press the shutter button halfway down. • You can zoom large images up to 13x, medium images up to 10x and small images up to 6.7x. When taking photos, there are many times when you want to review the images you’ve taken, ideally before leaving the scene. While displayed, you can rotate, delete, zoom, and otherwise manage them using buttons and dials. When playing back images pressing DISP cycles you through recording data, recording data with history of previous shots, and no recording information. Auto Review When you take a photo, it’s displayed for 2 seconds (counting from when the image is saved) although you can change this with the Info.disp.time setting on the Setup 1 menu (page 142). With an image displayed, you can turn either control dial, press the multi-selector, or press any button marked with a blue icon on the camera body—Delete, Index, Enlarge, DISP, Rotate and Histogram. Doing any of these things switches the camera into playback mode so you can use any of the procedures described in the box “Playback Procedures” on page 19. Press the shutter button halfway down to take another photo. Image Playback To review some or all of the images you have taken, press the Playback button to display the last photo you took. You can then display small thumbnails so you can quickly locate a specific image, zoom in to examine details, delete the image or rotate it. In playback mode, you can press the shutter button halfway down at any time to instantly return to recording mode. Image Information Display To change what information is displayed in auto review or single-image playback, repeatedly press the DISP button to cycle through recording data, http://www.photocourse.com/itext/G-folders/ recording data with history of previous shots, and no recording information. The history of previous shots setting displays five small thumbnails and the Click here to view movies on working with one indicated with the orange bar is displayed enlarged. Once information is folders. displayed for one image, you can scroll through other images with the same information displayed. Tip • When you enlarge an image shot in Local AF area mode (page 72), it is enlarged so the area around the AF area used to focus it is centered in the enlargement. • Images shot in portrait mode are not rotated on the monitor in auto review. 18 Using Folders In index view a folder bar is displayed at the left side of the screen. Above the images the current folder/total number of folders are indicated next to the folder icon. To the left of this readout is the total number of images in the currently selected folder. To select a folder, press the multi-selector to the right or left to highlight the folder bar in orange, then press the multi-selector straight down to display a folder name in the center of the screen. If there are arrowheads above and below the folder name, press the multi-selector up or down to scroll through the available folders, and press it straight down to select one. Once a folder is selected, you can scroll through images in the folder or delete the folder and the images it contains by pressing the Delete button to display a confirmation screen where you select Cancel to retain the folder or Delete to delete it. For more on digital photography, visit http://www.shortcourses.com Playing Back & Managing Your Images MANAGING IMAGES—Using Buttons TIP • One way to delete all images on a card (and all folders but the current one), is to format the card (page 20). 1. With the camera on, press the Playback button and use any of the procedures described in the Table “Playback Procedures” below. 2. To resume shooting, press the Playback button or press the shutter button halfway down. Playback Procedures The Playback icon. ● To display one image after another, press the multi-selector left or right, or turn the front or rear control dials. ● To toggle between single-image and index views, press the Index button marked with the grid-like icon. While in index view: The Rotate icon. • To cycle through 4, 9, or 25 thumbnails, press DISP. • To scroll the frame to select a specific image, press the multi-selector or turn the front or rear control dial. • To scroll a page at a time, turn the rear control dial. ● To toggle between single-image and enlarged views, press the Enlarge button. When enlarged, a small square indicates which part of the image you are viewing: The Delete icon. The Index and Enlarge icons. Tips • Sony offers an optional AC Adapter/Charger AC-VQ900AM you can use to give slide shows without draining your battery pack. • When giving a slide show, due to differences in the aspect ratio of the screen and images, images may not fill the screen, or if they do, parts may be cut off. For • To adjust the degree of enlargement, turn the rear control dial. • To scroll around the image, press the multi-selector. Press the multi-selector straight down to switch between the enlarged image and the whole image. • To scroll to other images at the same enlargement turn the front control dial. ● To delete an image displayed in single-image view, one highlighted in index view, or a selected folder and all of the images it contains, press the Delete Button. When asked to confirm the deletion, press the multiselector to highlight Delete and then press it straight down. ● To rotate an image, press the Rotate button to display the rotation screen. Press the multi-selector straight down to rotate the image 90-degrees at a time. When finished, scroll to another image that needs rotating or press the Playback or Rotate button to return to the normal playback screen. Rotated images are only rotated after transfer to a computer if the software supports Sony’s rotation. ● To cycle through the information displays, press DISP. Image Recovery Software If you delete images or format a card by mistake, don’t despair. There is software that will let you recover your images if you don’t first save other photos on the same card. One such program is PC Inspector at (http://www.pcinspector.de) but you can find others by Googling “digital image recovery.” more on digital photography, visit http://www.shortcourses.com 19 Chapter 1. Camera Controls Using the and Creativity Playback 1 Menu Tips • When looking for pictures to erase, protect, or rotate, it’s often faster if you switch to index view (page 19). • When you get a new memory card, you should format it to work with the camera, or reformat a card if you encounter problems. The playback menu lists a variety of commands. Although only Delete, Format, and Protect from the Playback 1 menu are discussed here, the other playback commands on this menu are discussed elsewhere in this book. Playback 1 Menu Page Command • When deleting 100% of the images, use the All images choice. • When deleting less than 50%, use the Marked images choice. • When deleting more than 50%, protect the images you want to save, and then use the All images choice to delete the rest. The protect icon. Tip • When you playback an image on the TV or computer it will be displayed in portrait mode even if you select Manual rotate here. However, it won’t be rotated if you set Img.orientation to Not record. 20 Page Delete Erases images from the memory card 20 Format Prepares a memory card for image storage 20 Protect Protects images from being erased 20 DPOF setup Specifies images to be printed 144 └ Date imprint Prints the date on printed images 144 └ Index print Prints an index of selected images 144 PlaybackDisplay Selects auto or manual rotation 20 Using the Playback Menu Tip The best way to delete images depends on how many you are deleting. Settings 1. Press MENU and display the Playback 1 menu. (To jump directly to the menu first press the Playback button, then press MENU.) ● To delete or protect selected images, select Delete or Protect, then select Marked images. Scroll through your images and press the multi-selector straight down to mark it with (or remove) a trash can or protect icon. (The total number of images selected for deletion is given in the lowerleft corner of the screen.) When finished marking images, press MENU and you are prompted Delete images? or Protect images? Highlight Delete or OK and press the multi-selector straight down. ● To delete or protect all images, select Delete or Protect, then select All images and you are prompted Delete all images on card? or Protect images? Highlight Delete or OK and press the multi-selector straight down. ● To remove protection from all images, select Protect, then select Cancel all and you are prompted Cancel all? Highlight OK and press the multi-selector straight down. ● To format a memory card, select Format and you are prompted All data will be deleted. Format? Highlight OK and press the multiselector straight down. Just be aware the formatting a card erases all of the files on it, including any that have been protected. ● To set the way the camera rotates images so they are oriented correctly in playback mode, select PlaybackDisplay and then Auto rotate (the default) or Manual rotate. 2. When finished, press MENU or press the shutter button halfway down. For more on digital photography, visit http://www.shortcourses.com Using Using the the Playback 2 Menu Playback 2 Menu You can display your images as a slide show on the camera’s monitor or on a connected TV. To show them on the TV, turn both the TV and the camera off while you connect the supplied video cable to the VIDEO OUT terminal on the camera and the VIDEO IN terminal on the TV. Turn on the TV, set it for video input, then turn on the camera. The slide show button on the remote commander starts and stops a slide show. The previous/next button on the remote commander lets you move though the images in the show manually. • You may need to set Video output on the Setup 1 menu to match the video input of your TV. Your choices include NTSC and PAL. • The camera’s monitor is turned off when the camera is connected to a TV. Use the display on the TV to follow the steps listed in the QuickSteps box below. • The quality of images displayed on a TV is lower than when they are displayed on a computer screen, or on a HDTV connected with an HDMI cable. To use an HDMI the HDTV must have a connector and you need an HDMI cable that isn’t supplied with the camera. The cable should have a HDMI logo, have a mini HDMI connector for the camera on one end and a connector that matches the one on your TV on the other end. You can specify HDMI output on the Setup 1 menu (page 142). • To set the slide show interval, the time an image remains on the screen, press MENU, select Interval on the Playback 2 menu, then select 1, 3 (the default), 5, 10, or 30 seconds. The pause/resume button on the remote commander pauses and restarts a slide show once it’s begun. The HDMI logo. You can use the Remote Commander that comes with the camera to display and manage your images when displaying them on the TV. The buttons either have names such as MENU, PRINT and so on, or icons matching the ones you’ll find on the camera. Each of these icons is introduced in the section of this book where the function it represents is discussed. The SHUTTER, 2SEC, and PRINT buttons are used with the camera in record mode or connected to a PictBridge printer. All of the other buttons are used to playback and manage your images. Giving Slide Shows 1. Press MENU and select the Playback 2 menu. 2. Select Slide show and press the multi-selector straight down to start the show. ● To pause and restart the show, press the multi-selector straight down. When paused, a pause icon is displayed in the upper left corner of the monitor or TV screen. ● To manually scroll through images, press the multi-selector left or right. Playback button names and icons on the Remote Commander. For ● To specify what information is superimposed on the images, press DISP. 3. To stop the show at any point, press the MENU or shutter button. more on digital photography, visit http://www.shortcourses.com 21 Chapter 1. Camera Controls and Selecting Image Quality Creativity and Size Digital photographs are made up of millions of tiny squares called picture elhttp://www.photocourse.com/itext/dots/ Click to see how dots are used in printing. ements—or just pixels. Like the impressionists who painted wonderful scenes with small dabs of paint, your computer and printer can use these tiny pixels to display or print photographs. To do so, the computer divides the screen or printed page into a grid of pixels. It then uses the values stored in the digital photograph to specify the brightness and color of each pixel in this grid—a form of painting by number. Any image that looks sharp and has smooth transitions in tones (top) is actually made up of millions of individual square pixels (bottom). Each pixel is a solid, uniform color. Tip • The term “resolution” has two meanings in photography. Originally it referred to the ability of a camera system to resolve pairs of fine lines such as those found on a test chart. In this usage it’s an indicator of sharpness, not image size. With the introduction of digital cameras it began being used to indicate the number of pixels a camera could capture. Number of Pixels http://www.photocourse.com/itext/resolution/ The quality of a digital image depends in part on the number of pixels used to create the image (sometimes referred to as resolution). At a given size, more pixels add detail and sharpen edges. However, there are always size limits. When you enlarge any digital image enough, the pixels begin to show—an http://www.photocourse.com/itext/pixelzoom/ effect called pixelization. This is not unlike traditional silver-based prints where grain begins to show when prints are enlarged past a certain point. Click to see the effects Click to explore the original meaning of “resolution”. of pixelization as an image is enlarged. 22 For more on digital photography, visit http://www.shortcourses.com Selecting Image Quality and Size When a digital image is displayed or printed at the correct size for the number of pixels it contains, it looks like a normal photograph. When enlarged too much (as is the eye here), its square pixels begin to show. Each pixel is a small square made up of a single color. http://www.photocourse.com/itext/imagesize/ Click to see how the output device determines image sizes. http://www.photocourse.com/itext/pixelresolution/ Click to explore how more pixels give sharper images. The size of a photograph is specified in one of two ways—by its dimensions http://www.photocourse.com/itext/excel/math-imagesize.xls Click for Excel work sheet on image sizes. in pixels or by the total number of pixels it contains. For example, the same image can be said to have 4272 × 2848 pixels (where “×” is pronounced “by” as in “4272 by 2848”), or to contain 12.2 million pixels or megapixels (4272 multiplied by 2848). Image sizes are expressed as dimensions in pixels (4272 × 2848) or by the total number of pixels (12.2 megapixels). Image Sizes • The A700 gives you a choice of three image sizes: 4272 × 2848 (large), 3104 x 2064 (medium), and 2128 × 1424 (small). For more on digital photography, visit http://www.shortcourses.com 23 Chapter 1. Camera Controls and Creativity How An Image is Captured Digital cameras are very much like the rapidly disappearing 35mm film cameras. Both types contain a lens, an aperture, and a shutter. The lens brings light from the scene into focus inside the camera so it can expose an image. The aperture is a hole that can be made smaller or larger to control the amount of light entering the camera. The shutter is a device that can be opened or closed to control the length of time the light is allowed to enter. The big difference between traditional film cameras and digital cameras is how they capture the image. Instead of film, digital cameras use a solid-state device called an image sensor. In the A700, the image sensor is a CMOS chip. On the surface of this fingernail-sized silicon chip is a grid containing over 12 million photosensitive diodes called photosites, photoelements, or pixels. Each photosite captures a single pixel in the photograph to be. The Exposure When you press the shutter button of a digital camera, an exposure system measures the light coming through the lens and sets the aperture and shutter speed for the correct exposure. When the shutter opens briefly, each pixel on the image sensor records the brightness of the light that falls on it by accumulating an electrical charge. The more light that hits a pixel, the higher the charge it records. Pixels capturing light from highlights in the scene will have high charges. Those capturing light from shadows will have low charges. An image sensor against a background enlargement of its square pixels, each capable of capturing one pixel in the final image. When the shutter closes to end the exposure, the charge from each pixel is measured and converted into a digital number. This series of numbers is then used to reconstruct the image by setting the color and brightness of matching pixels on the screen or printed page. It’s All Black and White After All It may be surprising, but pixels on an image sensor can only capture brightness, not color. They record only the gray scale—a series of 256 increasingly darker tones ranging from pure white to pure black. How the camera creates a color image from the brightness recorded by each pixel is an interesting story. The gray scale contains a range of tones from pure white to pure black. When photography was first invented, it could only record black and white images. The search for color was a long and arduous process, and a lot of hand coloring went on in the interim (causing one photographer to comment “so you have to know how to paint after all!”). One major breakthrough was James Clerk Maxwell’s 1860 discovery that color photographs could be created using black and white film and red, blue, and green filters. He had the photographer Thomas Sutton photograph a tartan ribbon three times, each time with a different color filter over the lens. The three black and white images were then projected onto a screen with three different projectors, each equipped with the same color filter used to take the image being projected. When brought into alignment, the three images formed a full-color photograph. Over a century later, image sensors work much the same way. 24 For more on digital photography, visit http://www.shortcourses.com Selecting Image Quality and Size Colors in a photographic image are usually based on the three primary colors red, green, and blue (RGB). This is called the additive color system because new colors are formed by mixing together other colors. This RGB system is used whenever light is projected to form colors as it is on the display monitor (or in your eye). RGB uses additive colors. When all three are mixed in equal amounts they form white. When red and green overlap they form yellow, and so on. Since daylight is made up of red, green, and blue light; placing red, green, and blue filters over individual pixels on the image sensor can create color images just as they did for Maxwell in 1860. Using a process called interpolation, the camera computes the full color of each pixel by combining the color it captured directly with the other two colors captured by the pixels around it. How well it does this is affected in part by the image quality, size, and aspect ratio you select. Select an Image Quality One of the most important choices you’ll make when shooting photos is what format, or quality, to use—JPEG or RAW. The choices you have to choose from include the following (the menu setting is in parentheses)—RAW, cRAW (cRAW), RAW & JPEG (RAW+J), cRAW & JPEG (cRAW+J), JPEG Extra fine (X.FINE), JPEG Fine (FINE) and JPEG Standard (STD). Here is what each of the terms used in these menu choices refers to: http://www.photocourse.com/itext/RGB/ Click to explore how three colors are used to create full-color images on the screen. http://www.photocourse.com/itext/CMYK/ Click to explore how three colors are used to create full-color prints. • JPEG is the default format used by the A700 and almost every other digital camera ever made. Named after its developer, the Joint Photographic Experts Group (and pronounced “jay-peg”) this format lets you specify both image size and compression. The A700 lets you choose from three image sizes when shooting JPEGs (page http://www.photocourse.com/itext/compression/ 26). The JPEG format also compresses images to make them smaller and the A700 lets you specify how much they are compressed. This is a useful feature because there is a trade-off between compression and image quality. Images captured in the Extra fine (X.FINE on the menu) mode are compressed less than those in the Fine (FINE on the menu) or Standard (STD on the menu) http://www.photocourse.com/itext/RAW/ modes. Less compression gives you better images so you can make larger Click here to explore the differences between prints, but you can’t store as many images on a given card. Click here to see the effects of compression. JPEG and RAW formats. • RAW images are often better than JPEG images because they are not processed in the camera, but on your more powerful desktop computer. These RAW files contain every bit of the captured data, unlike JPEGs which are processed in the camera with some data being discarded. RAW files are 4272 x 2848 pixels in size and can be viewed, edited, and converted to other formats using most photo-editing software such as Photoshop or Lightroom or Sony’s own Image Data Converter SR program included on a CD that comes with the camera. RAW images can be captured by themselves or with a companion JPEG image of any size and Fine quality. The later choice gives you an identical high quality RAW file and a smaller, more easily distributable JPEG file with the same names but different extensions—.ARW (the A700 uses the ARW 2.0 format) and .JPG. For more on RAW images, see page 27. • cRAW images are the same as RAW but compressed up to 40% so more will fit on the memory card. Image quality choices on the menu include those shown here. J, X.FINE, FINE and STD are all JPEGs For • RAW and cRAW images are always captured at the largest file size, and any compression used is lossless. • RAW and cRAW images cannot be added to a print order (page 144) or printed directly from the camera. more on digital photography, visit http://www.shortcourses.com 25 Chapter 1. Camera Controls Tip Filenames vary as follows: • DSCOxxxx.jpg • _DSOxxxx.jpg when Adobe RGB is used • DSCOxxxx.arw • _DSOxxxx.arw when Adobe RGB is used Tip • If you select RAW or cRAW quality first, you can’t change the image size. If you have already changed the image size, selecting RAW or cRAW resets the size to large. and Creativity • The effects of D-Range Optimizer (page 133) cannot be seen on the camera’s monitor but are recorded in the image. • When you capture a JPEG along with a RAW or cRAW image, the JPEG’s quality is set to Fine. Selecting an Image Size In addition to image quality, the A700 also allows you to change image size as a way of controlling the size of image files. Because you can squeeze more 3104 x 2064 images onto a memory card than you can squeeze 4272 x 2848 images, there may be times when you’ll want to switch to a smaller size and sacrifice quality for quantity. Image Sizes 3:2 Aspect Ratio 16:9 Aspect Ratio Large 4272 x 2848 4272 x 2400 Medium 3104 x 2064 3104 x 1744 Small 2128 x 1424 2128 x 1200 • You cannot change image size if you have set image quality to RAW or cRAW because all RAW images are large—4272 x 2848. • If you select one of the RAW+JPEG qualities, you can change the image size, but the change only affects the accompanying JPEG. • At 200 pixels per inch large images will give you sharp 21 x 14 inch prints, medium images will give you 16 x 10, and small will give you 11 x 7. Guidelines in the viewfinder show the horizontal band that will be captured when using the 16:9 aspect ratio. Selecting an Aspect Ratio The A700 lets you choose from two aspect ratios—the normal 3:2 or the HDTV 16:9. These numbers represent the ratio of an image’s width to height. The ratio of a square is 1:1 (equal width and height) and that of 35mm film is 1.5:1 (1½ times wider than it is high). Most image sensors fall in between these extremes. The aspect ratio of a sensor is important because it determines the shape and proportions of the photographs you create. When an image has a different aspect ratio that the device it’s displayed or printed on, it has to be cropped or resized to fit. Your choice is to crop part of the image or waste part of the paper or display area. To imagine this better, try printing a square image on a rectangular sheet of paper so either the entire image is printed or the entire paper is filled. The 16:9 aspect ratio is nothing you can’t do in a photo-editing program using cropping. However, it does have an advantage when you want to immediately display your pictures on an HDTV with a matching aspect ratio. Aspect Ratios Device Size 35mm film 36 x 24mm 1.50 Sony A700 4272 x 2848 1.50 Printing paper A high capacity card lets you store the largest possible images without worrying as much about running out of storage space. Courtesy of SanDisk. 26 Aspect Ratio Computer display HDTV 8.5 x 11 1.29 1024 x 768 pixels 1.33 16 x 9 1.80 To calculate the aspect ratio of any image or image sensor, divide the largest number in its resolution by the smallest number. For example, if a sensor has a resolution of 4272 x 2848, divide the former by the later. In this case the For more on digital photography, visit http://www.shortcourses.com Selecting Image Quality Tips • You can change contrast, saturation, sharpness, brightness and zone matching using Creative Styles (page 135). • When you change image quality or size, the monitor always indicates the number of new shots that will fit on the current CF card. and Size aspect ratio is 1.5 (which Sony calls 3:2 to get rid of the decimal point), the same as 35 mm film but different from 8.5 x 11 paper. • RAW and cRAW images captured using the 16:9 aspect ratio are displayed using software such as Sony’s Image Data Converter SR that support the format. Other photo-editing programs will show them uncropped, at the normal 3:2 aspect ratio. Selecting an Image Quality When you select an image quality, size, and aspect ratio, you’re not only affecting the quality of your images, but also how many images can be stored on your memory card. Sometimes when there is no storage space left, you can switch to a smaller size and higher compression to squeeze a few more images onto the card. Here are some estimates of the number of 3:2 images that would fit on an 8 Gigabyte card. The numbers would be slightly higher when using the 16:9 format. Large Medium Small Standard 1973 3087 4543 Fine 1344 2208 3489 Extra fine 720 1240 2057 cRAW + JPEG 410 465 504 RAW + JPEG 309 339 359 cRAW 590 – – RAW 401 – – Choosing a Format When choosing between JPEG and RAW formats, here are some things to consider about each format. Because you can’t add pixels later and retain image quality, or remove the effects of compression after the fact, it’s usually best to use the largest available JPEG size and the least compression available. If you have to reduce either, you can do so later using a photo-editing program. If you shoot the image at a lower quality setting, you can never really improve it much or get a large, sharp print if you want one. The only problem with this approach is that higher quality images have larger file sizes. Images in this format used to require an extra processing step but since the latest programs such as Aperture and Lightroom were designed from the ground up after RAW formats were introduced they handle them as easily as they handle JPEGs. Selecting a Quality, Size and Aspect Ratio You can use the Fn button to display the Quick Navi screen and change image size and quality but not aspect ratio. 1. With the Mode Dial set to any mode, press MENU and display the Recording 1 menu. 2. Highlight Image size, Quality, or Aspect ratio and press the multiselector straight down to display a list of choices. 3. Highlight one of the choices and press the multi-selector straight down to select it. 4. Press the MENU or shutter button to hide the menu. For more on digital photography, visit http://www.shortcourses.com 27 Chapter 1. Camera Controls and Creativity There are a number of advantages to using the RAW format: • RAW lets you decide on most camera settings after you’ve taken the picture, not before. For example, when you shoot a JPEG image under fluorescent lights, the camera adjusts the image to remove the yellow-green tint. Any changes you make later are on top of this initial change. If you shoot the image in RAW format, the camera just captures the images as is and you decide what white balance setting to use later. You can even create different versions of an image, each with its own white balance. The only camera settings that permanently affect the image are the shutter speed and aperture, the ISO setting, and D-Range optimization. • RAW images can be processed again at a later date when new and improved applications become available. Your original image isn’t permanently altered by today’s generation of photo-editing applications. • You can generate alternate versions of the same RAW image. For example, you can adjust highlight and shadow areas and save these versions separately. Using a photo-editing program, you can then combine the two images as layers and by selectively erasing parts of the top image layer let areas of the lower image layer show through so all areas have a perfect exposure. Admittedly, there are drawbacks to using RAW images. • RAW files are quite large. If you use this format a great deal you will need more storage space in the camera and on the computer, and computer processing times may be slightly longer. • When shooting images, you may have to wait longer between shots and you can’t shoot as many images in a continuous burst. The buffer gets filled more quickly and the camera is tied up longer processing the images you take, and moving them from the buffer to the memory card. • Since RAW images aren’t converted to a viewable format in the camera, you have to process them on the computer and export them in a usable format when you want to e-mail them, post them on a Web site, print them, or import them into another program to create a slide show or publication. When you are done shooting for the day, there is still work to do. • RAW images can only be viewed and edited on a computer using a program such as Adobe’s Photoshop or Lightroom that supports the format. Since each camera company has defined its own proprietary RAW format, many operating systems and even photo-editing programs are unable to recognize some or all of these files. For this reason camera manufacturers always supply a program to process RAW images along with their cameras—in the case of the A700, it’s Image Data Converter SR. 28 For more on digital photography, visit http://www.shortcourses.com Chapter 2. Controlling Exposure Chapter 2 Controlling Exposure Contents • Understanding Exposure • Choosing Recording Modes • Using Scene Selection Modes • Using Program AE (P) Mode and Program Shift • Using Shutter-Priority (S) Mode • Using Aperture Priority (A) Mode • Using Manual (M) Mode and Manual Shift • How Your Exposure System Works • When Automatic Exposure Works Well • When to Override Automatic Exposure • How Overriding Auto-exposure Works • How to Override Automatic Exposure • Using Histograms For A utomatic exposure control is one of the most useful features of your camera. It’s great to have the camera automatically deal with the exposure while you concentrate on the image. This is especially helpful when photographing action scenes where there isn’t time to evaluate the situation and set the controls manually. You shouldn’t, however, always leave the exposure to the automatic system. At times the lighting can fool any automatic exposure system into producing an underexposed (too dark) or overexposed (too light) image. Although you can make adjustments to a poorly exposed image in a photo-editing program, you’ve lost image information in the shadows or highlights that can’t be recovered. You will find it better in some situations to override the automatic exposure system at the time you take the picture. Typical situations in which you might want to override automatic exposure include scenes with interesting and unusual lighting. For example, you need to take control when you photograph into the sun, record a colorful sunset, show the brilliance of a snow-covered landscape, or convey the dark moodiness of a forest. more on digital photography, visit http://www.shortcourses.com 29