Canon R10 Wildlife Settings / Setup - Complete Walkthrough
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 21 ก.ย. 2024
- I'm having a lot of fun shooting wildlife with the Canon R10. These are the settings I have found most helpful. The auto-focus and eye detection on this camera is amazing. Overall I'm happy with the photos I've been getting. Especially the chance to photograph Bald eagles. Thanks for watching and I hope you find this tutorial useful.
Canon r10 - amzn.to/3lkeSwz
RF 100-400 5.6-8 - amzn.to/3Xeiu0f
thank you for these videos
Thank you for watching!
Thanks for tips !
You're Welcome. I hope they come in handy.
@@BrentTouchstone They will, im about to buy r10 :)
Hi
I just bought my first camera, a canon R10 and it came with a lens. But what would you recommend I get to be able to photograph birds?
I’m going to try to set up my camera the way you described it ( if I can 😅). Thank you for a great video 👍🏻
Hello. The Canon RF 100-400mm 5.6-8 is a great entry lens for birds it’s light, small and not very expensive. I think you would be very happy with it and if you get really into the craft and want to splurge on a pro level lens later on this would still be a good lens for longer hikes and travel when you don’t want to carry a big pro level lens. I love mine and I’ve taken some really good photos with it. Thank you! And I hope you have a blast taking photos.
Thanks for your valuable information. I bought canon r10 with 210mm kit lens. It would be helpful to know how I can photograph birds with this lens in new condition.
The same camera settings will basically apply. You’re going to have to get pretty close to your subjects though. A great place to practice would be a nature center or park where the critters are a little more familiar with people being in close proximity.
Thanks for your advice. Please tell me another thing. When photographing a bird, press the camera's AF On button to focus, or turn the ring to focus? And what should be the correct shutter speed for flying birds? I took a picture of a flying Bald Eagle but it came out blurry so I asked.@@BrentTouchstone
hi this is the f irst video i have watched that makes things simple and you really explain things well, i only have 1 question somtimes when i use eye detection i get the focus box on he eye as if it was on spot but also get a bigger box around the body, could that be because i am not using spot? what i am trying to find out is if i use spot so the smallest autofocus area and eye detection i should be fine shuldnt i, because i always thought that if i only have a very small area then i would always miss the eye but im guessing it doesn't matter where the eye is in the frame it will look everywhere for it is that right please
Yeah. The camera will search the whole area for that eyeball. The little box I think you're referring to is different then the spot metering box. The camera will show a bigger box when it detects a body and the box will get smaller as it moves to the head and then eye. I hope that helps.
PLEASE ASSIST!!!
Just rec'd. my R10, and I can't change it from "F00", whether or not a lens is attached, in manual mode/manual focus.
The only time I’ve ever had that happen was if I had a lens not attached all the way or when using an old manual lens adapter.
@@BrentTouchstone Brand new adapter attached to my EF mounted Tokina ATX-i 100 mm macro lens BUT - it doesn't matter whether a lens is attached or not - I can't adjust the aperture, and no, the settings are not "locked". Camera is in manual mode, BTW.
What do you think??
Many thanks!
@@BrentTouchstone Turns out that YOU ARE RIGHT!!! Give that man a cigar!!!!
Many thanks!!!
Great video. Question and pardon my ignorance since I don't own this or any other APS-C mirror less camera yet, but how many different setting can you program and how do you access previous settings in manual mode?
The Canon R10 has two custom function areas where you can save presets for different scenarios; c1 & c2. Manual mode, at least on my Canon Cameras turn on with the last used settings saved. Hope that helps. I'm glad you, liked the video. Thanks :)
I just got the R10 with the 18-150 lens that came with it for an extra 400 bucks, is this any good ?
The R10 is a great camera and the kit lenses these days are quite good. That’s a good focal range for a lot of things like landscape and Street photography. If you want to do something like portraits or product photography and are on a tight budget look at the RF 50mm 1.8 if you’re looking to do wildlife that lens doesn’t have the reach but it still offers a lot of photo opportunity.
Hi r u recommend r10 for wildlife
Personally, I really like it. You can get better but for a lot more money. I think it’s a great camera for the price. It is what I use for all my wildlife right now. Excellent autofocus.
@@BrentTouchstone someones says r10 have a high iso issues its right?
no audio..i mean audio no gud in this video
Thanks for the constructive criticism!