(I posted this in general discussion forum but thought I'd cross-post it here) I saw this video of a quick tip on STM lenses and focusing. This issue must confuse lots of people, and even the presenter says "Review this before contacting support" so...
I saw this video of a quick tip on STM lenses and focusing. This issue must confuse lots of people, and even the presenter says "Review this before contacting support" so I thought I'd share here. The author states "When manually focusing with STM l...
I noticed many updates to the Canon Digital Learning Center's how-to articles which are available on the web at: http://learn.usa.canon.com/dlc/news/display.spr For example, the following two articles by Laura Tillinghast on gear and settings for por...
I learned from a Canon Live Learning instructor that it is a good idea to first open a RAW file using DPP, and then saving it in a lossless format (for example TIFF) and then continuiing in the editing workflow with the file that was saved. This is ...
p 123 of the EOS M manual statesWith some EF lenses (Mount Adapter EF-EOS M required), it may take longer to achieve focus or correct focus may not be achieved. For the latest information, visit your local Canon Web site.I found an knowledge base art...
@limvo05 wrote:Hi, Not sure why I can nolonger upload photos here. Yes, I have thought of using a 1 or 2 stop ND grad. That said, I thought 3 stop is needed for the sence I was trying to capture. Based on my limited understanding of how this thing su...
It depends on whether your old lenses went through lots of rough handling but it seems that family and vacation photo taking is not that rough! So I think you can keep your existing lenses as long as they work fine. I guess you also to know if you c...
@limvo05 wrote:Noit sure if i am doing something wrong but I am seeing some unexpected results with the 3 stop soft ND grad. It tense to leave a drastic transition from dark to light more repaidly than i thought it would be. Was expect the soft edge ...
I agree but want to add one thought. If there is some movement between bracketed shots (waves, birds, etc.), it may cause a problem combining them in post-production. That depends on the scene though.