Casio Ex Fh100 Users Guide
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31Quick Start Basics Operation • Never open the battery cover while the back lamp is flashing green. Doing so can result in the image you just shot being sa ved incorrectly, damage to other images stored in memory, malfunction of the camera, etc. • If unwanted light is shining directly ont o the lens, shade the lens with your hand. Monitor Screen when Shooting Snapshots • Subject brightness conditions can cause monitor screen response to slow and can cause digital noise in the monitor screen image. • The image that appears on the monitor screen is for image composition. The actual image will be recorded at the quality set for the image quality setting (page 105). Shooting Indoors under Fluorescent Lighting • Minute flickering of fluorescent lighting can affect the brightness or color of an image. Other Precautions • The slower the shutter speed, the greater the possibility that noticeable noise will be generated in an image. Because of this, the camera automatically performs a noise reduction at slow shutter speeds. T he noise reduction process causes it to take longer to record images at lower s hutter speeds. The shutter speeds for which noise reduction is performed depend on the camera setup and shooting conditions. • A noise reduction process is performed when ISO sensitivity is set to a high value. This can cause the camera to take relative ly longer to be ready to shoot again after you press the shutter button. Do not perform any key operation while the image recording operation is in progress. • Due to the characteristics of the imagi ng element used by the camera, very fast moving objects in an image may appear distorted. Snapshot Shooting Precautions B
32Quick Start Basics • Any of the following can make proper focus impossible. – Solid color wall or other very low contrast subject – Strongly back lit subject – Very shiny subject – Blinds or other subject with a repeating horizontal pattern – Multiple subjects at varying distances from the camera – Subject in a dark location – Subject that is too far away for light from the AF assist light to reach – Camera movement while shooting – Fast-moving subject – Subjects outside the focus range of the camera • If you cannot focus properly, try using focus lock (page 93) or Manual Focus (page 91). Auto Focus Restrictions
33Snapshot Tutorial Snapshot Tutorial Your camera has a variety of different exposure modes. Before recording an image, rotate the mode dial to select the exposure mode that suits the type of image you are trying to record. Selecting the Exposure Mode BEST SHOT Simply select one of a collection of built-in sample scenes and the camera sets up automatically for beautiful images every time (page 68). Auto Use this setting for easy image recording. This is the mode you normally should use (page 25). A A (Aperture Priority) mode In this mode, you select the aperture and other settings are adjusted accordingly. 1Press [SET] to open the control panel. 2Use [8] and [2] to select the fourth control panel option from the top (aperture). 3Use [4] and [6] to change the aperture setting. S S (Shutter Speed Priority) mode In this mode, you select the shutter speed and other settings are adjusted accordingly. 1Press [SET] to open the control panel. 2Use [8] and [2] to select the fourth control panel option from the top (shutter speed). 3Use [4] and [6] to change the shutter speed setting. M M (Manual Exposure) mode This mode gives you total control over aperture and shutter speed settings. 1Press [SET] to open the control panel. 2Use [8] and [2] to select the fourth control panel option from the top (aperture). 3Use [4] and [6] to change the aperture setting. 4Use [8] and [2] to select the fifth control panel option from the top (shutter speed). 5Use [4] and [6] to change the shutter speed setting. Mode dial b t Aperture value Shutter speed Aperture value Shutter speed
34Snapshot Tutorial IMPORTANT! • The aperture and shutter speed setting control panels both have two-level displays. The upper level value is for snapshots, while the lower value is for movies. • You may not be able to achieve the brightness you want when shooting an image that is very dark or very bright. If this happens, use the M mode to adjust the aperture or shutter speed manually. •“S Image AS” (page 95) does not work in the S mode and M mode. You can, however, turn on “A Camera AS”, if you like. • In the S mode, ISO sensitivity (page 41) always operates according to its “AUTO” setting. The ISO sensitivity setting cannot be changed while in the S mode. • While A, S, or M is selected for the exposure mode, the flash will not fire if > (Auto Flash) or ¥ (Red Eye Reduction) is selected as the flash mode. If you want the flash to fire, select < (Flash On) as the flash mode. • The displayed ISO sensitivity, shutter speed or aperture value will turn orange when you half-press the shutter button if the image is overexposed or underexposed. Value for movies Value for snapshots
35Snapshot Tutorial 2.Use [8] and [2] to select the setting you want to change. This will select one of the control panel icons and display its settings.*1 3.Use [4] and [6] to change the setting. 4.If you want to configure another setting, repeat steps 2 and 3. 5.After all of the settings are the way you want, press [SET]. This will apply the settings and return to the REC mode. NOTE • You also can use on-screen menus to configure settings other than those listed above (page 89). Using the Control Panel The control panel can be used to configure camera settings. 1.In the REC mode, press [SET]. 1Image size/Quality*2 (pages 36, 105) 2ISO sensitivity (page 41) 3White balance (page 42) 4EV shift (page 43) 5Not displayed in this mode 6Not displayed in this mode 7Not displayed in this mode 8Flash (page 44) 9Date/Time (page 46) *1Items displayed in the control panel depend on the recording mode.*2Image quality cannot be changed using the control panel. [SET] [8] [2] [4] [6] 1 9 5 3 4 7 8 2 6Control panel
36Snapshot Tutorial .Pixels A digital camera image is a collection of small dots called “pixels”. The more pixels there are in an image, the more detail there will be. However, you generally can do with fewer pixels when printing an image (L size) through a print service, attaching an image to e-mail, when viewing the image on a computer, etc. .About image sizes The size of an image indicates how many pixels it contains, and is expressed as horizontal pixelsxvertical pixels. Changing the Image Size (Size) 10M (3648x2736) size image = Approximately 10 million pixels *Unit: pixels VGA (640x480) size image = Approximately 300,000 pixels Pixel 3648* 2736* 640* 480*
37Snapshot Tutorial Image Size Selection Tips Note that larger images have more pixels, so they take up more memory space. • For information about image size, image quality, and number of images that can be stored, see page 194. • For information about movie image size, see page 105. • For information about resizing existing snapshots, see page 130. .To select the image size 1.In the REC mode, press [SET]. 2.Use [8] and [2] to select the top control panel option (Image Size). 3.Use [4] and [6] to select an image size and then press [SET]. Large Number of PixelsMore detail, but takes up more memory. Best when you plan to print large-size prints (such as A3 size). Small Number of PixelsLess detail, but takes up less memory. Best when you want to send images by e-mail, etc.
38Snapshot Tutorial Image Size (Pixels)Suggested Print Size and ApplicationDescription RAW+RAW+JPEG (Select when you want to process image data yourself.)Saves the image as both normal JPEG data and RAW image data. A 10M size image is stored for the JPEG data. RAW image data is unprocessed data output by the image sensor and is saved in DNG (digital negative) format. Though the image of such data is virtually undeteriorated, it cannot be viewed on the camera’s monitor screen or printed. After transferring RAW image data to your computer, you can use software that supports the general- purpose DNG format to process the image and convert it to image data that suits your particular needs. Since both RAW image data and JPEG data are saved by the camera, you can view the JPEG version on the camera’s monitor screen. 10M (3648 x2736)Poster Print Good detail for better clarity even for images cropped (page 131) from the original 3:2 (3648 x2432)Poster Print 16:9 (3648 x2048)HDTV 9M (3456 x2592)A3 Print Good detail 7M (3072 x2304)A3 Print 4M (2304 x1728)A4 Print 2M (1600 x1200)3.5x5 PrintBest when preserving memory capacity is relatively more important than image quality. VGA (640 x480)E MailImage files are smaller, which is better when attaching images to e-mail. However, images are relatively coarser.
39Snapshot Tutorial • The initial factory default image size setting is 10M (10 million pixels). • Selecting “3:2” records images with an aspect ratio of 3:2, which matches the standard aspect ratio of print paper. • The letters “HDTV” stand for “High Definition Television”. An HDTV screen has an aspect ratio of 16:9, which makes them wider than the usual 4:3 aspect ratio of television screens of the past. Your camera can record images that are compatible with the aspect ratio an HDTV screen. • You should regard the print paper sizes suggested here as guidelines only (200 dpi print resolution). • Available image sizes are limited for some functions as noted below. RAW+This image size can be selected in the Single Shot mode only. This image size cannot be selected in the High Speed CS, Normal Speed CS, or F CS mode. 10MThis image size cannot be selected in the High Speed CS mode or when using some BEST SHOT scenes*. Switching to the High Speed CS mode or selecting some BEST SHOT scenes* while “10M” is selected will cause the image size setting to change to “9M” automatically. 3:2, 16:9These image sizes cannot be selected in the High Speed CS or F CS mode, or when using some BEST SHOT scenes*. If “RAW+” is selected in the Single Shot Mode Doing thisChanges to this image size automatically Entering the Normal Speed CS mode 10M Entering the F CS mode 10M Entering the High Speed CS mode 9M If “3:2” or “16:9” is selected in another mode Doing thisChanges to this image size automatically Entering the High Speed CS mode 9M Selecting some BEST SHOT scenes*9M Entering the F CS mode 10M
40Snapshot Tutorial *Applicable BEST SHOT scenes: “Move In CS”, “Move Out CS”, “High Speed Anti Shake”, “High Speed Night Scene”, “High Speed Night Scene and Portrait”, “Multi-motion Image”, “High Speed Best Selection”, “Lag Correction”, “High Speed Lighting”, “Expression CS”, “Baby CS”, “Child CS”, “Pet CS”, “Sports CS” 9MThis image size can be selected only in the High Speed CS mode or when using some BEST SHOT scenes*. Switching to another mode from the High Speed CS mode or selecting some BEST SHOT scenes* while “9M” is selected will cause the image size setting to change to “10M” automatically.