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Focusing on the subject
When you press the Shutter button halfway down,
the camera searches for focus within the focus
brackets. When it finds focus, the focus brackets turn
green.
If the focus brackets do not frame your subject, use
Focus Lock (see
Using Focus Lock”
on page 11).
Optimizing focus
When the camera cannot auto focus, the focus brackets turn red. This indicates the
picture may be out of focus because the subject is out of the focus range or the scene
has low contrast.
If you are recording a video or taking a picture with a shooting mode (see
Using the
Picture Capture and Video Record menus” on page 14) other than Close-up or
Super Close-up, and the camera cannot focus, it will still take the picture. Try
releasing the Shutter button, reframing, and then pressing the Shutter button halfway
down again. If the focus brackets are still red, try the following.
For pictures and video clips: If the scene has low contrast, use Focus Lock (see
Using Focus Lock” on page 11) and aim at a point on the subject that has more colors
or crisp edges.
For pictures only:
Select a shooting mode more appropriate for the scene you are capturing (see
Shooting Mode under
Using the Picture Capture and Video Record menus”
on page 14).
If the subject is too close (less than 300 mm or 11.81 in), move farther away from the
subject or use
Close-up or Super Close-up (see Close-up and Super Close-
up under
Using the Picture Capture and Video Record menus” on page 14).
If the camera is set to
Close-up or Super Close-up and cannot focus, the
camera will not take the picture. Try one of the following:
Move within the
Close-up range (200-800 mm or 7.87-31.5 in) or Super
Close-up range (20-200 mm or 0.79–7.87 in) or set the camera to
Auto
(see Auto under
Using the Picture Capture and Video Record menus”
on page 14).
In low contrast scenes, use Focus Lock (see
Using Focus Lock”
on page 11).
Chapter 2
10 Taking pictures and recording video clips