Magic Lantern Guides®: Canon EOS 50D
By Rob Sheppard
()
About this ebook
- This is a highly-anticipated addition to Canons advanced amateur lineup, with outstanding features that are the highest in the DSLR class
- This guide is indispensable for photographers who want to take full advantage of all this impressive new model has to offer
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Magic Lantern Guides® - Rob Sheppard
Magic Lantern Guides®
Rob Sheppard
A Division of Sterling Publishing Co., Inc.
New York / London
Editor: Rebecca Shipkosky
Book Design and Layout: Michael Robertson
Cover Design: Thom Gaines
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Sheppard, Rob.
Canon EOS 50D / Rob Sheppard. -- 1st ed.
p. cm. -- (Magic lantern guides)
Includes index.
ISBN 978-1-60059-526-4 (pbk. : alk. paper)
1. Canon digital cameras--Handbooks, manuals, etc. 2.
Photography--Digital techniques--Handbooks, manuals, etc. 3.
Photography--Handbooks, manuals, etc. 4. Single lens reflex
cameras--Handbooks, manuals, etc. I. Title.
TR263.C3S5227 2009
771.3'2--dc22
2009003803
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
First Edition
Published by Lark Books, A Division of
Sterling Publishing Co., Inc.
387 Park Avenue South, New York, N.Y. 10016
Text © 2009, Rob Sheppard
Photography © 2009, Rob Sheppard unless otherwise specified
Distributed in Canada by Sterling Publishing,
c/o Canadian Manda Group, 165 Dufferin Street
Toronto, Ontario, Canada M6K 3H6
Distributed in the United Kingdom by GMC Distribution Services,
Castle Place, 166 High Street, Lewes, East Sussex, England BN7 1XU
Distributed in Australia by Capricorn Link (Australia) Pty Ltd.,
P.O. Box 704, Windsor, NSW 2756 Australia
This book is not sponsored by Canon.
The written instructions, photographs, designs, patterns, and projects in this volume are intended for the personal use of the reader and may be reproduced for that purpose only. Any other use, especially commercial use, is forbidden under law without written permission of the copyright holder.
Canon, EOS, Rebel, and other Canon product names or terminology are trademarks of Canon Inc. Other trademarks are recognized as belonging to their respective owners.
Every effort has been made to ensure that all the information in this book is accurate. However, due to differing conditions, tools, and individual skills, the publisher cannot be responsible for any injuries, losses, and other damages that may result from the use of the information in this book. Because specifications may be changed by manufacturers without notice, the contents of this book may not necessarily agree with software and equipment changes made after publication.
If you have questions or comments about this book, please contact:
Lark Books
67 Broadway
Asheville, NC 28801
(828) 253-0467
Manufactured in the Unites States of America
All rights reserved
ISBN 13: 978-1-60059-526-4
For information about custom editions, special sales, premium and corporate purchases, please contact Sterling Special Sales Department at 800-805-5489 or specialsales@sterlingpub.com.
Contents
A Continuing Evolution
Reviewing the Differences Between Film and Digital
Film vs. the Sensor
The LCD Monitor
Memory Cards
Exposure
ISO Sensitivity
Noise
File Formats
Digital Resolution
The Color of Light
Cost of Shooting
Features and Functions
Camera Nomenclature
Overview of Features
Camera Controls
Main Dial
Quick Control Dial
Multi-Controller
Shutter Button
Camera Activation
Three-Position Poser Switch
Sensor Cleaning
Auto Power Off
Resetting Controls
The Viewfinder
Viewfinder Adjustment
Viewfinder Nomenclature
The LCD Monitor
The Live View Function
LCD Panel Nomenclature
The LCD Panel
Power
Date/Time
The Sensor and Processor
Cleaning the Sensor
Mirror Lockup
Memory Cards
Working with Memory Cards
Organizing Images on the Memory Card
Formatting Your Memory Card
Erasing Images from Your Memory Card
Cleaning the Camera
In-Camera Processing and File Formats
Picture Style
Changing Picture Style Settings
Changing Monochrome Settings
User-Defined Picture Styles
Picture Style Editor
White Balance
What is Color Temperature?
White Balance Settings
White Balance Correction
White Balance Auto-Bracketing
Color Space
Remembering Camera Settings
Checking Camera Settings
The 50D File Formats
RAW Exposure Processing
Image Recording Quality
File Quality and Card Capacity
Camera Menus and the LCD Monitor
Navigating the Menus
Shooting 1 Menu
Shooting 2 Menu
Playback 1 Menu
Playback 2 Menu
Set-up 1 Menu
Set-up 2 Menu
Set-up 3 Menu
Custom Functions Menu
My Menu
Custom Functions
CFn I: Exposure
CFn II: Image
CFn III: Autofocus/Drive
CFn IV: Operation/Others
The LCD Monitor
LCD Instant Image Review
Playback
Automatic Image Rotation
Magnifying the Image
File Numbering and New Folders
Protecting Images
Erasing Images
Slide Shows from the Camera
TV Playback
Camera Operation Modes
Focus
AF Modes
Selecting an AF Point
AF with Live View
AF Limitations
AF-ON Button
Drive Modes and Self-Timer Control
Exposure
ISO Sensitivity
Metering
Judging Exposure
Highlight Tone Priority
AE (autoexposure) Lock
Exposure Compensation
Autoexposure Bracketing
Shooting Modes
Basic Zone Shooting Modes
Auto Brightness and Contrast Correction
Creative Zone Shooting Modes
Choosing Shutter Speeds
Flash
Using Flash
Flash Synchronization
Guide Numbers
Built-In Flash
Flash Metering
Flash with Camera Exposure Modes
Program
Shutter-Priority
Aperture-Priority
Manual
Flash Exposure Compensation
First and Second Curtain Flash
Red-Eye Reduction
Canon Speedlite EX Flash Units
Canon Speedlite 580EX II
Canon Speedlite 430EX
Canon Speedlite 430EX II
Canon Speedlite 220EX
Other Speedlites
Macro Twin Lite MT-24EX
Macro Ring Lite MR-14EX
Wireless E-TTL Flash
Lenses and Accessories
Choosing Lenses
Zoom vs Prime Lenses
EF-Series Lenses
EF-S Series Lenses
L Series Lenses
DO Series Lenses
Image Stabilizer Lenses
Macro and Tilt-Shift Lenses
Independent Lens Brands
Filters and Close-Up Lenses
Polarizers
Neutral Density Gray Filters
Graduated Neutral Density Filters
UV and Skylight Filters
Close-Up Accessories
Tripods and Camera Support
Working with the Computer
Direct from Camera
The Card Reader
Organizing Digital Image Files
Browser and Cataloging Programs
Image Processing
Digital Photo Professional Software
Storing Your Images
Direct Printing
Digital Print Order Format (DPOF)
Index
The latest photographic technologies and sophisticated features found in your Canon EOS 50D will help you capture the wonder and beauty all around that is waiting to be recorded.
A Continuing Evolution
You now have an excellent camera in the Canon EOS 50D. But obviously having a good camera and getting good pictures can be two different things. This book is designed to help you understand the features of the 50D so that you can get the most from it. Furthermore, this book is meant to be an extended instruction manual for the EOS 50D. It covers some of the material that is in the manufacturer’s manual, but includes quite a bit more in terms of photographic information to help you take advantage of what this camera has to offer. In fact, I have added insights and analysis that were not part of other Canon Magic Lantern Guides—a little more perspective. Sure, previous guides examined a particular control and told you how to operate it, but now I am going further to offer ideas based on my long experience working with digital SLRs (D-SLRs) and in digital photography.
Check out the Insider View sections throughout the book to give you special insight on camera features and working with the 50D.
The Insider View
notes found throughout this guide will alert you to personal observations on how you can get the most out of a particular feature. Overall, this guide will help you better use the Canon EOS 50D. The 50D continues the evolution of mid-priced Canon digital SLRs from the 10D to the 20D to the 30D to the 40D; in many ways, it is a seriously upgraded 40D. If you understand the 40D, you will understand the 50D. They are nearly identical in terms of basic operation. The 40D was the first in this price range to offer 14-bit capture capability, and had a 10.1 megapixel sensor, an increase of nearly 20% over the 30D. The 50D continues the 14-bit capability, but now ups the sensor size to a remarkable 15.1 megapixel CMOS sensor, a nearly 50% increase over the 40D! It is important to note that megapixels are not everything when it comes to image quality, and extremely high resolution on a small sensor can even cause a reduction in image quality, but Canon has managed to increase the number of pixels without making that sacrifice. The camera also includes a remarkable 6.3 frames per second (fps) shooting speed, a high-resolution LCD far superior to the 40D’s monitor, Live View that uses that resolution and includes better autofocus functions, and offers self-cleaning sensor capabilities (the same as the 40D).
Note: Throughout this guide, when the terms left
and right
are used to describe the locations of camera controls, it is assumed that the camera is being held in the shooting position, unless otherwise noted.
Insider View: See? Here’s the first Insider View! The fact that Canon increases the number of pixels by almost 50 percent means there are a lot of pixels on the APS-C-size sensor. In the past, that would’ve meant lower image quality, particularly an increase in noise. Canon has worked hard to prevent that from happening, so that image quality remains high along with more megapixels. Digital SLRs were all 12-bit cameras before the Canon Mark III series. The EOS 40D brought that capability into an affordable camera, which is retained in the 50D. You cannot really see much difference when you look at 8-bit (like JPEG files), 12-bit, and 14-bit images. The difference comes in the processing. Each higher bit-depth offers an exponential increase in data that can be used to get a better-looking image. This results in the ability to get better tonality and color gradations when shooting in RAW. However, that doesn’t mean JPEGs are unaffected, because a JPEG file is a RAW image processed by Canon’s DIGIC 4 chip. So with more data to work with, even in-camera processing has the potential for better looking photos. Megapixels are not everything in image quality—higher bit-depth offers the possibility of much higher image quality than just a higher megapixel count.
Canon’s self-cleaning sensors are very important. Sensor dust has consistently plagued digital photographers, creating annoying dark spots on a photo. This self-cleaning sensor will not eliminate dust completely (you will need to blow out the mirror box of the camera regularly), it makes dust a much smaller problem.
One feature that you will definitely like is the high resolution LCD. This makes the images displayed on the back of your camera so much better-looking and easier to evaluate. All of these factors make the Canon EOS 50D an excellent upgrade from the 40D camera.
While designed to meet the requirements of advanced amateurs, the 50D is definitely attractive to pros as well because of its size and high-quality APS-C sensor. In some ways, this makes the camera a little schizophrenic: There are several functions that few amateurs will use, and some features in which pros will have little interest. This book covers them all, however, because all of these features make this a very powerful camera.
Just like the 40D, the 50D also has many similarities to the EOS-1D Mark III and EOS-1Ds Mark III in the way it handles. To be sure, the Mark IIIs are much bigger cameras, but the types of controls (like the AF-start button on the back) and the way in which they function are very similar. This makes the 50D attractive to professionals, especially as a companion camera to the EOS-1D Mark III.
Many photographers will have purchased the 50D as an upgrade from earlier EOS D-SLRs. For some, however, this is their first high-quality digital camera. Since a number of readers are new to D-SLR photography, this book will explain an assortment of topics that are basic to experienced digital photographers. If you are familiar with these terms and concepts, skip ahead to the detailed sections on camera operation. As a matter of convenience (and easier reading), I will often refer to the Canon EOS 50D simply as the 50D or the EOS 50D.
Insider View: Few photographers, amateur or pro, know or understand every control on the camera. You don’t need to know how to operate everything on your 50D in order to get great photos. Explore those features that work for you, try out some new ones, and forget whatever doesn’t work for you. You can always come back to this book later to further develop your knowledge of 50D functions.
Reviewing the Differences Between Film and Digital
For photographers who have only shot digital, this section may seem like a curiosity. Still, there are enough people who have shot film or who talk about shooting film so that it is important to review some important differences between film and digital. Most photographers understand that digital cameras do some things quite differently from traditional film cameras. This next section will help you better understand digital photography—beginners may want to read it, others may skim or even skip it.
Film vs. the Sensor
Film and digital cameras expose pictures using virtually identical methods—a shutter and a lens opening (f/stop or aperture) control the light reaching the film or sensor. The exposure is determined by light metering systems based on the same technologies. The sensitivity standards for film and sensors are similar. These similarities exist because both film and digital cameras share the same function: to deliver the amount of light required by the sensitized medium (film or sensor) to create a picture you will like.
However, digital sensors react differently to light than film does. From dark areas (such as navy blue blazers, asphalt, and shadows) to midtones (blue sky and grass) to bright areas (such as white houses and sandy beaches), a digital sensor responds to the full range of light equally, or linearly. Film, however, responds linearly only to midtones (those blue skies and green fairways). Therefore, film blends tones very well in highlight areas, whereas digital sensors sometimes have trouble with the brightest tones. The 50D has a Highlight Tone Priority option to deal specifically with this challenge and make highlights look better. Digital technology typically responds to highlights the way slide film does, and to shadows as print film does.
The 50D has a large, high-resolution LCD that makes it easy to carefully evaluate your images, allowing you to learn from mistakes and make better photographs.
The LCD Monitor
One of the major limitations of film is that you really don’t know if your picture is a success until the film is developed. You have to wait to find out if the exposure was correct or if something happened to spoil the results (such as the blurring of a moving subject or stray reflections from flash). With digital single lens reflex, cameras, you can review your image on an LCD monitor—a screen found on the back of the camera—within seconds of taking the shot. While LCDs will not perfectly represent things like exposure and color, they provide a general idea of what has been recorded, so you can evaluate your pictures as soon as you have shot them. The 50D’s new 3-inch, high-resolution LCD makes a big difference in what you can see on the LCD.
Be sure you have a memory card large enough that allows you to take any picture you want and capture unique shots as they appear.
Memory Cards
Memory cards are necessary to store images captured by a digital camera. These removable cards affect photographic technique by giving you:
• More photos—Memory cards come in a range of capacities that will determine how many photos you can record on a single card. But regardless of the particular capacity of your memory card, it is capable of holding the equivalent of many rolls of film.
• Removable photos—You can erase photos at any time from a memory card, removing the ones you don’t want while opening space for additional photos, which will simplify the process of organizing your final set of images. Once images are transferred to your computer (or other storage medium such as an accessory hard drive or a high-quality DVD-R or CD-R), the card can be reused.
• Durability—Memory cards can be removed from the camera at any time (turn the camera off first and be sure no images are being still being recorded) without the risk of ruined pictures. CompactFlash cards (like those used in the 50D) are encased in solid plastic so they are unaffected if they are dropped or get wet. They can even be taken through the carry-on inspection machines at the airport without suffering damage.
• Small size—In the space taken up by just a couple of rolls of film, you can store or carry multiple memory cards that will hold thousands of images.
Insider View: There are a few misunderstandings or urban legends
about memory cards. It is amazingly difficult to damage a CompactFlash card. They are extremely durable and have been known to go through a washing machine without problems! You cannot wear out
a memory card. You cannot hurt a memory card by erasing images from it, although it can get confused
if you do too much of that without formatting the card. You should format your card