Canon Eos Rebel T3 1100d Instruction Manual
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111 A Customizing Image Characteristics N Sharpness Adjusts the sharpness of the image. To make it less sharp, set it toward the E end. The closer it is to E, the softer the image will look. To make it sharper, set it toward the F end. The closer it is to F, the sharper the image will look. Contrast Adjusts the image contrast and the vividness of colors. To decrease the contrast, set it towa rd the minus end. The closer it is to G , the blander the image will look. To increase the contrast, set it toward the plus end. The closer it is to H, the crisper the image will look. Saturation The image’s color saturation can be adjusted. To decrease the color saturation, set it toward the minus end. The closer it is to G, the more diluted the colors will look. To increase the color saturation, set it toward the plus end. The closer it is to H, the bolder the colors will look. Color tone The skin tones can be adjusted. To make the skin tone redder, set it toward the minus end. The closer it is to G, the redder the skin tone will look. To make the skin tone less red, set it toward the plus end. The closer it is to H, the more yellow the skin tone will look. Parameter Settings and Effects By selecting [ Default set.] in step 3, you can revert the respective Picture Style to its defa ult parameter settings. To shoot with the Picture Style you mo dified, follow step 2 on page 79 to select the modified Picture Style and then shoot. COPY
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A Customizing Image CharacteristicsN 112 For Monochrome, you can also set [ Filter effect] and [Toning effect] in addition to [ Sharpness] and [Contrast ] explained on the preceding page. kFilter Effect With a filter effect applied to a monochrome image, you can make white clouds or green trees stand out more. lToning Effect By applying a toning effect, you can create a monochrome image in that color. It can make the image look more impressive. You can select the following: [N:None ], [S:Sepia ], [B:Blue ], [P:Purple ] or [G:Green ]. V Monochrome Adjustment FilterSample Effects N: NoneNormal black-and-white image with no filter effects. Ye : Ye l l o wThe blue sky will look more natural, and the wh ite clouds will look crisper. Or: OrangeThe blue sky will look slightly darker. The sunset will look more brilliant. R: RedThe blue sky will look quite dark. Fa ll leaves will look crisper and brighter. G: GreenSkin tones and lips will look fine. Tr ee leaves will look crisper and brighter. Increasing the [ Contrast] will make the filter effect more pronounced. COPY
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113 You can select a base Picture Style such as [Portrait] or [Landscape ], adjust its parameters as des ired and register it under [User Def. 1], [User Def. 2 ], or [User Def. 3 ]. You can create Picture Styles whose parameter settings such as sharpness and contrast are diff erent. You can also adjust the parameters of a Picture Style which has been registered to the camera with EOS Utility (provided software, p.270). 1Select [Picture Style]. Under the [ 2] tab, select [Picture Style ], then press < 0>. XThe Picture Style selection screen will appear. 2Select [User Def.]. Select [User Def. * ], then press the < B > button. XThe Detail set. screen will appear. 3Press < 0>. With [ Picture Style] selected, press < 0 >. 4Select the base Picture Style. Press the < V> key to select the base Picture Style, then press < 0>. To adjust the parameters of a Picture Style which has been registered to the camera with EOS Utility (provided software), select the Picture Style here. A Registering Preferred Image CharacteristicsN COPY
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A Registering Preferred Image Characteristics N 114 5Select a parameter. Select a parameter such as [Sharpness], then press < 0>. 6Set the parameter. Press the < U> key to adjust the parameter as desired, then press < 0 >. For details, see “Customizing Image Characteristics” on pages 110-112. Press the button to register the modified Picture Style. The Picture Style selection screen will then reappear. XThe base Picture Style will be indicated on the right of [ User Def. *]. XThe name of the Picture Style having any modified settings (different from the default) registered under [ User Def. * ] will be displayed in blue. If a Picture Style has alread y been registered under [User Def. *], changing the base Picture Style in step 4 will nullify the parameter settings of the registered Picture Style. If you execute [ Clear all camera settings ] (p.164), all the [User Def. *] settings will revert to the default. Any Picture Style registered via EOS Utility (provided software) will have only its modified parameters reverted to the default setting. To shoot with a registered Picture Styl e, follow step 2 on page 79 to select [ User Def. * ] and then shoot. COPY
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115 The function adjusting the color tone so that white objects look white in the picture is called white ba lance (WB). Normally, the (Auto) setting will obtain the correct white balance. If natural-looking colors cannot be obtained with < Q>, you can select the white balance to match the light source or set it manually by shooting a white object. 1Press the button. X[White balance ] will appear. 2Select the white balance. Press the < U> key or turn the < 6 > dial to select the desired white balance, then press < 0>. The “Approx. ****K” (K: Kelvin) displayed for the following white balance settings < W>, < E >, < R >, or < U> is the respective color temperature. Custom white balance enables you to manually set the white balance for a specific light source for better accuracy. Do this procedure under the actual light source to be used. 1Photograph a white object. A plain, white object should fill the viewfinder’s center. Focus manually and set the standard exposure for the white object. You can set any white balance. B : Matching the Light Source N O Custom White Balance COPY
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B: Matching the Light Source N 116 2Select [Custom White Balance]. Under the [ 2] tab, select [Custom White Balance], then press < 0>. XThe custom white balance selection screen will appear. 3Import the white balance data. Select the image that was captured in step 1, then press . XOn the dialog screen which appears, select [OK] and the data will be imported. When the menu reappears, press the button to exit the menu. 4Select the custom white balance. Press the button. Select [O ], then press < 0>. If the exposure obtained in step 1 is way off, a correct white balance might not be obtained. If the image was captured whil e the Picture Style was set to [ Monochrome ] (p.80), it cannot be selected in step 3. Instead of a white object, an 18% gray card (commercially available) can produce a more accu rate white balance. The personal white balance regist ered with EOS Utility (provided software, p.270) will be registered under < O>. If you do step 3, the data for the registered personal wh ite balance will be erased. COPY
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117 You can correct the white balance that has been set. This adjustment will have the same effect as using a commercially-available color temperature conversion filter or color compensating filter. Each color can be corrected to one of nine levels. This is for advanced users who are familiar with using color temperature conversion or color compensating filters. 1Select [WB Shift/BKT]. Under the [ 2] tab, select [WB Shift/ BKT ], then press < 0>. XThe WB correction/WB bracketing screen will appear. 2Set the white balance correction. Press the < S> key to move the “ ” mark to the desired position. B is for blue, A is amber, M is magenta, and G is green. The color in the respective direction will be corrected. On the upper right, “ Shift” indicates the direction and correction amount. Pressing the < B> button will cancel all the [ WB Shift/BKT ] settings. Press < 0> to exit the setting and return to the menu. 2 Adjusting the Color Tone for the Light SourceN White Balance Correction Sample setting: A2, G1 During the white ba lance correction, will be displayed in the viewfinder and on the LCD monitor. One level of the blue/amber correction is equivalent to 5 mireds of a color temperature conversion filter. (Mir ed: Measuring unit indicating the density of a color temper ature conversion filter.) COPY
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2 Adjusting the Color Tone for the Light Source N 118 With just one shot, three images having a different color balance can be recorded simultaneously. Ba sed on the color temperature of the current white balance setting, the image will be br acketed with a blue/amber bias or magenta/green bias. This is called white balance bracketing (WB-BKT). White balance bracketing is possible up to ±3 levels in single-level increments. Set the white balance bracketing amount. In step 2 for white balance correction, when you turn the < 6> dial, the “ ” mark on the screen will change to “ ” (3 points). Turning the dial to the right sets the B/A bracketing, an d turning it to the left sets the M/G bracketing. XOn the right, “Bracket” indicates the bracketing direction and correction amount. Pressing the button will cancel all the [WB Shift/BKT] settings. Press < 0> to exit the setting and return to the menu. Bracketing Sequence The images will be bracketed in the following sequence: 1. Standard white balance, 2. Blue (B) bias, and 3. Amber (A) bias, or 1. Standard white balance, 2. Magenta (M) bias, and 3. Green (G) bias. White Balance Auto Bracketing B/A bias ±3 levels During WB bracketing, the continuous shooting speed will be slower. The maximum burst for continuous shooting wi ll also be lower and the number of possible shots will decrease to one-third the normal number. You can also set white balance correc tion and AEB (p.103) together with white balance bracketing. If you set AEB in combination wi th white balance bracketing, a total of nine images will be recorded for a single shot. Since three images are recorded for one shot, the card will take longer to record the shot. “BKT ” stands for Bracketing. COPY
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119 The range of reproducible colors is called the color space. With this camera, you can set the color space to sRGB or Adobe RGB for captured images. For normal shooting, sRGB is recommended. In Basic Zone modes, sRGB is set automatically. 1Select [Color space]. Under the [ 2] tab, select [Color space ], then press < 0>. 2Set the desired color space. Select [ sRGB] or [Adobe RGB ], then press < 0>. This color space is mainly used for commercial printing and other industrial uses. This setting is not recommended if you do not know about image processing, Adobe RGB, and Design rule for Camera File System 2.0 (Exif 2.21). The image will look very subdued in a sRGB personal computer environment and with printers not co mpatible with Design rule for Camera File System 2.0 (Exif 2.21). Post-processing of the image with \ software will therefore be required. 3 Setting the Color Reproduction RangeN About Adobe RGB If the image is captured with the color space set to Adobe RGB, the file name will start with “_MG_” (fir st character is an underscore). The ICC profile is not appended. See explanations about the ICC profile in the Software Instruction Manual (p.272) in the CD-ROM. COPY