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Setting Up a Shot: Difference between revisions

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All of these settings can be set to 'AUTO'.  If you're in a rush then 'AUTO' will ''usually'' give okey results.
All of these settings can be set to 'AUTO'.  If you're in a rush then 'AUTO' will ''usually'' give okay results.
On the big black HD cameras, lightly press the 'menu' button on th screen, this will allow youto change the common settings.  If one of the settings has a yellow/orange bar next to it then it's been set to manual and you ought to check that it's been set appropriately.
On the big black HD cameras, lightly press the 'menu' button on the screen, this will allow you to change the common settings.  If one of the settings has a yellow/orange bar next to it then it's been set to manual and you ought to check that it's been set appropriately.




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Focus on the camera can work in one of two ways; Auto and Manual. Manual involves telling the camera how far away from the lens your subject is, and that's what it'll focus on. Auto involves the camera looking at your footage and working out by itself how far away your subject is.
Focus on the camera can work in one of two ways; Auto and Manual. Manual involves telling the camera how far away from the lens your subject is, and that's what it'll focus on. Auto involves the camera looking at your footage and working out by itself how far away your subject is.


If you're filming in decent light and using lots of zoom, then Auto is advised.  If you're in dark situations, or the camera shot won't be changing at all then Manual will give much better results. Remember that auto-focus can cause the camera to suddenly think it needs to re-focus when it doesn't, and your shot briefly dips out of focus.
If you're filming in decent light and frequently changing zoom and/or composition, then Auto is advised.  If you're in dark situations, or the camera shot won't be changing at all then Manual will give much better results. Remember that auto-focus can cause the camera to suddenly think it needs to re-focus when it doesn't, and your shot briefly dips out of focus.
 
Additionally, while in autofocus, the camera can stubornly lock on to a completely incorrect focus.  This can be solved by switching to manual focus and forcing the focus to chang to something sensible, then switching back to auto and letting it carry on.  Alternatively, briefly covering the lens might persuade it to change the focus.  This effect is made worse by a dirty filter, as the camera attempts to focus on the dust on the filter.


To set manual focus: In the menu press the 'focus' button.  Select manual.  Here you can also alter the distance at which the camera focuses. Using the LCD to set the focus on your fully framed shot is completely impossible, because the screen is just too small. A trick that works is to zoom right into the subject, switch to auto-focus, wait a few seconds for auto-focus to work its magic, then switch back to manual and zoom out.
To set manual focus: In the menu press the 'focus' button.  Select manual.  Here you can also alter the distance at which the camera focuses. Using the LCD to set the focus on your fully framed shot is completely impossible, because the screen is just too small. A trick that works is to zoom right into the subject, switch to auto-focus, wait a few seconds for auto-focus to work its magic, then switch back to manual and zoom out.