Canon EOS Rebel T7/2000D For Dummies book cover

Canon EOS Rebel T7/2000D For Dummies

Overview

A photography class—in a book!

Your Canon EOS Rebel T7/1400D provides enough camera power to take the pro-style shots you've dreamed of shooting—and this book shows you how. Canon EOS Rebel T7/1400D For Dummies bridges the gap between taking quick shots in auto mode and taking charge of the settings that offer full control of your pictures' focus, color, and light balance.

Take a peek inside to discover all the expert tips and tricks to take brag-worthy portraits, action shots, and close-ups—in a flash. No matter your subject, you’ll get all the know-how and instruction you need to get the picture-perfect shot every time.

  • Get started with automatic and creative modes
  • Take full control of exposure to achieve better results
  • Understand the settings that control light and color
  • Follow steps on properly using flash

Even if you’ve never picked up a DSLR camera, this friendly guide makes it fast and easy to unlock all your powerful Canon has to offer!

 

A photography class—in a book!

Your Canon EOS Rebel T7/1400D provides enough camera power to take the pro-style shots you've dreamed of shooting—and this book shows you how. Canon EOS Rebel T7/1400D For Dummies bridges the gap between taking quick shots in auto mode and taking charge of the settings that offer full control of your pictures' focus, color, and light balance.

Take a peek inside to discover all the expert tips and tricks to take brag-worthy portraits, action shots, and close-ups—in

a flash. No matter your subject, you’ll get all the know-how and instruction you need to get the picture-perfect shot every time.

  • Get started with automatic and creative modes
  • Take full control of exposure to achieve better results
  • Understand the settings that control light and color
  • Follow steps on properly using flash

Even if you’ve never picked up a DSLR camera, this friendly guide makes it fast and easy to unlock all your powerful Canon has to offer!

 

Canon EOS Rebel T7/2000D For Dummies Cheat Sheet

Your Canon T7/2000D has so many features that it can be difficult to remember what each button and dial does. For times when you need a little help, here’s an overview of your camera's external controls and exposure modes. Print out this guide, tuck it in your camera bag, and get a head start on taking great photographs!

Articles From The Book

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Canon Articles

How to View Pictures in Playback Mode on the Canon EOS Rebel T7/2000D

To switch to Playback mode on the Canon EOS Rebel T7/2000D, press the Playback button, labeled in the figure. The last photo you took appears onscreen, and you also may see some shooting data. In the figure, for example, the shutter speed and f-stop settings appear in the upper-left corner of the monitor, and the folder number and file number appear in the upper-right corner. Several camera buttons come into play when you're viewing images. Note that with the exception of the DISP button, the labels on the buttons are either all blue or partially blue. Canon likes to color-code things, and blue is the color chosen for playback. In the camera menu system, Playback Menus 1 and 2 are decorated in blue as well. (The black-and-white portions of labels refer to shooting functions.) Here's a quick-start guide to playback features:

  • Scrolling from one image to the next: Press the right cross key to go forward one photo; press the left cross key to go back one.

To skip more quickly through images, rotate the Main dial to enter Jump mode. By default, the camera leaps through photos ten at a time, but you can set up a different system if you prefer.

  • Display image thumbnails (Index view): Instead of viewing a single photo, you can switch to Index view, which displays four or nine thumbnails.

To switch from single-image view to four-image view, press the Index/Reduce button, labeled “Display thumbnails” in the preceding figure. Press the button again to display nine thumbnails.

In Index view, movie files are indicated by borders that look like the sprocket holes in old film reels (labeled a movie file in the figure). To play a movie, you must exit Index view; just press Set to do so. Press Set again to open the movie-playback screen.

  • Select a file in Index view: When Index view is active, you can perform some file operations, such as erasing a photo or movie. But you first need to select the file by using the cross keys to place a selection box over the file's thumbnail. In the figure, I labeled the selected thumbnails. (In single-image view, the image on the monitor is automatically selected.)
  • Scroll from one page of thumbnails to the next: Either rotate the Main dial or press the up/down cross keys. (The Main dial doesn't invoke Jump mode in Index view.)
  • Reduce the number of thumbnails: Press the Magnify button. Press once to go from nine thumbnails to four; press again to shift from four thumbnails to single-image view.

You also can press the Set button to switch from Index view to single-image view. The image that was highlighted in Index view appears on the monitor after you press Set.

  • Change the amount of shooting data that appears: Press the DISP button to cycle through the various playback display modes, each of which presents a different amount of shooting data.

Jumping through images on your Canon EOS Rebel T7/2000D

If your memory card contains scads of images, here’s a trick you’ll love: By using the Jump feature, you can rotate the Main dial to leapfrog through images rather than press the right or left cross key a bazillion times to get to the picture you want to see. You also can search for the first image shot on a specific date, tell the camera to display only movies or only still shots, or display images with a specific star rating. You can choose from the following Jump options:
  • Display Images One by One: This option, in effect, disables jumping, restricting you to browsing pictures one at a time. So, what’s the point? If you select this setting, you can scroll pictures by rotating the Main dial as well as by pressing the right/left cross keys.
  • Jump 10 Images: Advance 10 images at a time.
  • Jump 100 Images: Advance 100 images at a time.
  • Display by Date: If your card contains images shot on different dates, you can jump between dates with this option. For example, if you’re looking at the first of 30 pictures taken on June 1, you can jump past all others from that day to the first image taken on, say, June 5.
  • Display by Folder: If you create custom folders on your memory card, this option jumps you from the current folder to the first photo in a different folder.
  • Display Movies Only: Does your memory card contain both still photos and movies? If you want to view only the movie files, select this option. Then rotate the Main dial to jump from one movie to the next without seeing any still photos.
  • Display Stills Only: This one is the opposite of the Movies option: Movie files are hidden when you use the Main dial to scroll photos. You scroll one picture at a time, just like when you use the Display Images One by One option.
  • Display by Image Rating: With the Rating feature, you can assign each photo or movie a rating of one to five stars, which makes it easy to sort out your best work from your worst. If you take this step, you can set up the Jump feature so that only photos that have a specific rating are displayed.

You can establish your Jump preference by using the Quick Control screen or Playback Menu 2, as follows:

  • Quick Control screen: After displaying a photo in playback mode, press the Q button to display the Quick Control playback icons, as shown. (If you're viewing images in Index mode, the camera temporarily shifts to single-image view and displays the image that was highlighted.)

Use the up/down cross keys to highlight the Jump icon, labeled on the left in the figure. Along the bottom of the screen, you see the icons representing the available Jump options, with a highlight box around the currently selected setting. (The text above the icon strip tells you what each symbol represents.) Use the left/right cross keys to highlight the icon representing the jump method you want to use.

If you select the Image Rating option, as shown in the figure, rotate the Main dial to set the number of stars that an image must have in order to be displayed. For example, in the figure, I set the option to five stars. Exit the Quick Control screen by pressing the Q button.

  • Playback Menu 2: Select Image Jump, as shown, and then press Set to display the settings screen shown on the right. Use the cross keys to choose a Jump method. Again, if you select the Display by Image Rating option, rotate the Main dial to specify how many stars qualifies an image for jump viewing. Press Set to lock in your choice and return to the initial menu screen.
After selecting a Jump method, take the following steps to jump through your photos: 1. Set the camera to display a single photo.

You can use jumping only when viewing a single photo at a time. To leave Index (thumbnails) mode quickly, press the Set button.

2. Rotate the Main dial.

The camera jumps to the next image. The number of images you advance, and whether you see movies as well as still photos, depends on the Jump method you select.

If you select any Jump setting but Display Images One by One, a jump bar appears for a few seconds at the bottom of the monitor, indicating the current Jump setting, as. For the Image Rating Jump method, you also see the number of stars you specified.

3. To return to regular Playback mode, press the right or left cross key.

Rotating pictures on the Canon EOS Rebel T7/2000D

When you take a picture, the camera can tag the image file with the camera orientation: that is, whether you held the camera horizontally or vertically. When you view the picture, the camera can read the data and rotate the image so that it appears upright in the monitor, as shown on the left, instead of on its side, as shown on the right. The image is also rotated automatically when you view it in Canon Digital Photo Professional 4, the free photo software available for download from the Canon website. Some other photo viewing programs and apps also can read the rotation data.

Photographers use the term portrait orientation to refer to vertically oriented pictures and landscape orientation to refer to horizontally oriented pictures. The terms stem from the traditional way that people and places are photographed — portraits, vertically; landscapes, horizontally.

By default, the camera tags the photo with the orientation data and rotates the image automatically both on the camera and on your computer screen. But you have other choices, as follows:
  • Disable or adjust automatic rotation. Select Auto Rotate on Setup Menu 1, as shown on the left. Then choose from these options:
    • On (Camera and Computer): Labeled in the figure, this option is the default; rotation happens both on the computer and camera. (The camera and computer symbols shown to the right of the word On tell you that rotation will occur on both devices.)
    • On (Computer Only): Also labeled in the figure, this setting rotates pictures only on a computer monitor. Notice the absence of the camera icon, reminding you that photos won't be rotated when you view them on the camera monitor.
    • Off: New pictures aren’t tagged with the orientation data, and existing photos aren’t rotated during playback on the camera, even if they're tagged.
  • Rotate pictures during playback. If you stick with the default Auto Rotate setting, you can rotate pictures to a different orientation during playback via the Quick Control screen. Highlight the Rotate option, as shown here, and then press the right or left cross keys to select one of the three orientation icons (labeled in the figure). Press the Q button a second time to exit the Quick Control screen.

The Quick Control method does not work if you set the Auto Rotate option on Setup Menu 1 to Off or computer-rotation only. However, you can still rotate pictures via the Rotate Image option on Playback Menu 1, shown on the left.

Choose the menu option and then press Set to display your photos. In Index display mode, use the cross keys to select the image that needs rotating. In full-frame display, just scroll to the photo. Either way, press Set once to rotate the image 90 degrees; press again to rotate 180 additional degrees; press once more to return to 0 degrees, or back where you started. Press Menu to return to the menu system or Playback to return to viewing pictures. The photo remains in its rotated orientation only if the Auto Rotate option is set to the default (rotation on for both computer and camera display).

All these rotation features apply only to still photos; you can’t rotate movies.

Zooming in for a closer view on the Canon EOS Rebel T7/2000D

During playback, you can magnify a photo to inspect details, as shown. In the example photo, I had to zoom way in to reveal the colorful visitor hanging on my rain chain, apparently searching for a tailor. (Get it? He's missing part of his tail, so he needs a tail … oh never mind. The good news is that his tail will grow back, so you needn't fret for his safety. My sanity is another story.) At any rate, you can magnify only photos and only when you’re displaying photos one at a time. So if the camera is in Index display mode, press Set to return to full-frame view. Then use these techniques to adjust the image magnification:
  • Zoom in. Press and hold the Magnify button until you reach the magnification you want. You can enlarge the image up to ten times its normal display size.

Note the plus sign in the middle of the magnifying glass part of the button icon. That's your reminder to use this button to increase the display magnification.

  • View another part of the picture. When the image is magnified, a little thumbnail representing the entire image appears in the lower-right corner of the monitor, as shown in the right image in the preceding figure. The solid white box indicates the area of the image that is shown on the monitor. Press the cross keys to scroll the display to see another portion of the image.
  • View more images at the same magnification. While the display is zoomed, rotate the Main dial to display the same area of the next photo at the same magnification. (The Jump feature, normally triggered by rotating the dial, is disabled while a photo is magnified.) For example, if you shot a group portrait several times, you can easily check each one for shut-eye problems.
  • Zoom out. To zoom out to a reduced magnification, press the Index/Reduce button. Continue holding down the button until you reach the magnification you want.

Here again, the symbol inside the magnifying glass label offers a hint as to the button's purpose: The minus sign indicates that pressing the button decreases the magnification. After you zoom all the way out, pressing the button another time shifts the display to Index (thumbnails) view.

  • Return to full-frame view when zoomed in. To exit magnified view, don’t keep pressing the Index/Reduce button until you zoom out all the way. Instead, just press the Playback button, which quickly returns you to full-frame view.

Canon Articles

Image Zone (Scene) Modes on the Canon EOS Rebel T7/2000D

In addition to Auto and Auto Flash Off modes, the Canon EOS Rebel T7/2000D offers several Image Zone modes, labeled in the figure. Each mode is designed to make it easy to capture a specific type of scene, which is why such modes are known generically as scene modes. The following list describes each scene mode. But before you dig in, understand that whether any scene mode can produce the results it promises depends on many factors, including the ambient light and your lens capabilities. In other words, your mileage may vary.

  • Portrait: Select this mode to create the classic portraiture look, with a sharply focused subject and a blurred background, as illustrated. Portrait mode also warms colors (makes them a little more red) and reduces skin texture slightly, the idea being to create a more flattering rendition of your subject.
  • Landscape mode: This mode produces traditional landscape characteristics, with sharp focus maintained over a long distance from the camera lens, as shown. (I set focus on the rocks in the foreground for this shot.) Landscape mode also increases contrast and color saturation, with blues and greens appearing especially vibrant. Flash is disabled.
  • Close-up mode: Switching to Close-up mode doesn’t enable you to focus at a closer distance to your subject than normal, as it does on some non-SLR cameras. The close-focusing capabilities of your camera depend entirely on the lens you use. (Your lens manual should specify the minimum focusing distance.)

Instead, Close-up mode, like Portrait mode, is designed to blur background objects so that they don’t compete for attention with your main subject. I used Close-up mode to capture the orchid in the figure, for example. But in Close-up mode, the camera doesn’t play with color, sharpness, or contrast as it does in Portrait and Landscape modes. So in that regard, Close-up mode is the same as Scene Intelligent Auto.

  • Sports mode: Sports mode is designed for capturing moving subjects without blur, as in the following figure. Colors, sharpness, and contrast are all standard in Sports mode, with none of the adjustments that occur in Portrait and Landscape modes.

In dim lighting, your subjects may appear blurred even in Sports mode. The problem is that the lack of light requires a slow shutter speed, and you need a fast shutter speed to capture motion without blur. Unfortunately, you can't add light by using the camera's built-in flash; it's disabled in Sports mode.

  • Food mode: The goal of this mode is to tweak color and exposure in a way that makes food more appetizing — at least, in a way that Canon thinks makes food look better to most people. Specifically, if you shoot the picture in incandescent lighting, which emits reddish light, the camera tweaks colors to tone down those warm hues. Exposure is also increased just a hair to make everything a little brighter.
  • Night Portrait: As its name implies, Night Portrait mode is designed to deliver a better-looking portrait at night, which it attempts by combining flash with a slow shutter speed. The longer exposure time enables the camera to rely more on ambient light and less on the flash to expose the picture. The result is a brighter background and softer, more even lighting. If you can keep your subject and the camera perfectly still during the exposure, Night Portrait mode works great. Otherwise, either the subject or the entire picture may blur.

Night Portrait mode also differs from regular Portrait mode in that it renders the scene in the same way as Scene Intelligent Auto in terms of colors, contrast, and sharpness.

Taking pictures in scene modes

The process of taking a picture in one of the scene modes is pretty much the same as for Auto and Flash Off modes. But there are a few variations to understand:
  • Autofocusing in Sports mode: In Sports mode, the camera sets initial focus on the object at the center of the frame when you press the shutter button halfway. However, if the subject moves from that spot, autofocus is adjusted as needed until the time you press the shutter button the rest of the way to take the shot.

This continuous autofocusing is not available if you shoot in Live View mode. So, use the viewfinder when photographing in Sports mode.

  • Autofocusing in other scene modes: Autofocusing behavior depends on whether you use the viewfinder or Live View to shoot the picture:
    • Viewfinder photography: When you press the shutter button halfway, focus is locked. The camera decides which of the nine focus points to use to set the focusing distance (usually choosing the one that falls over the object closest to the lens).
    • Live View photography: By default, the camera uses the AF FlexiZone-Single autofocusing option, which requires you to use the cross keys to position the focus frame over your subject. You can choose either of the two other Live View autofocusing options. Use the Quick Control screen to change the setting.
  • Changing the Drive mode: This setting determines when and how the shutter releases after you press the shutter button. Here are the default settings used for the scene modes:
    • Landscape, Close-up, Food, Night Portrait: The Drive mode is set to Single, which means that you get one frame each time you press the shutter button.
    • Portrait, Sports: The default Drive mode is Continuous, which means that the camera records a series of images in rapid succession as long as you hold down the shutter button.

All the scene modes enable you to switch to the normal Self-Timer mode, which delays the shutter release for 10 seconds after you press the shutter button. You also can choose the continuous Self-Timer mode, which also has a 10-second delay but enables you to capture up to nine frames each time you press the shutter button. The 2-second Self-Timer mode is off-limits.

The fastest way to adjust the Drive mode setting during viewfinder photography is to press the left cross key, but you can also adjust it via the Quick Control screen. (You must use the Quick Control method in Live View mode.)

  • Using flash: Flash is disabled in Landscape and Sports modes. In Food mode, flash is turned off by default, but you can enable it via the Quick Control screen. (Note that using flash in Food mode may eliminate the color and brightness adjustments that normally happen in that mode.)

In Portrait, Close-up, and Night Portrait modes, flash is set to automatic firing; the camera raises and fires the built-in flash when the ambient light is insufficient to expose the picture. For modes that allow flash, you can turn on Red-Eye Reduction via Shooting Menu 1.

Modifying scene mode results

When you rely on the scene modes, you don't have much control over the final look of your picture. But you can make small adjustments to color, sharpness, contrast, and exposure.

Taking a look at the Ambience option

In all the scene modes, you can modify the results of your next shot via the Ambience setting. First, here’s a look at what the various Ambience options accomplish:
  • Standard: Consider this the “off” setting. When you select this option, the camera makes no adjustment to the characteristics normally produced by your selected scene mode.
  • Vivid: Increases contrast, color saturation, and sharpness.
  • Soft: Creates the appearance of slightly softer focus.
  • Warm: Warms (adds a reddish-orange color cast) and softens.
  • Intense: Boosts contrast and saturation (color intensity) even more than the Vivid setting.
  • Cool: Adds a cool (blue) color cast.
  • Brighter: Lightens the photo.
  • Darker: Darkens the photo.
  • Monochrome: Creates a black-and-white photo, with an optional color tint.
Unfortunately, only one setting can be in force at a time. You can't ask for both a more vivid photo and a warmer photo, for example.

Also note that all adjustments are applied in addition to whatever adjustments occur by virtue of your selected scene mode. For example, Landscape mode already produces slightly sharper, more vivid colors than normal. If you add the Vivid ambience option, you amp things up another notch.

You can control the amount of the adjustment, however, through a related setting, Effect. You can choose from three Effect levels. The level name and its effect depend on the adjustment you choose. Most Effects have Low, Standard, and Strong settings. Darker and Lighter have Low, Medium, and High settings. In the case of the Monochrome setting, the Effect setting enables you to switch from a black-and-white image to a monochrome image with a warm (sepia) or cool (blue) tint. As a quick example of the results you can achieve, This figure shows the same subject shot at four Ambience settings. I took all pictures in the Landscape scene mode. For the three variations — Vivid, Warm, and Intense — I applied the maximum level of adjustment, setting the Effect option to Strong.

If you're more concerned with exposure than color, check out the Brighter and Darker settings, which give you a way to overrule the camera’s exposure decisions. For example, in the left image here, the exposure of the background was fine, but the flower was overexposed. So, I set the Ambience option to Darker, set the Effect option to Medium, and shot the flower again.

Eliminating color casts

Normally, the camera renders colors accurately through its automatic white-balancing system, which compensates for any color added to a scene by the light source. For example, incandescent lights infuse a scene with a warm tint, which is neutralized by the white-balancing system. When a scene is lit by two or more light sources, though, the camera can get confused, creating a photo that has an unnatural color tint. In that event, you may be able to fix things through the following options:
  • Light/Scene Type: Available in Portrait, Landscape, Sports, and Close-up scene modes, this option enables you to tell the camera to compensate for a particular light source or, for outdoor shots, the lighting conditions. Your choices include Default (no adjustment), Daylight, Shade, Cloudy, and Sunset. For Portrait, Sports, and Close-up modes, you also can choose Fluorescent Light and Tungsten Light (select this setting for incandescent bulbs as well as tungsten bulbs).
  • Color Tone (Food mode only): When you use the Food scene mode, you lose access to the Light/Scene Type option. In its place, you get a Color Tone slider that enables you to make colors warmer (more red) or cooler (more blue).

Adjusting the Ambience and Light/Scene Type settings

The options described determine your final photo colors and exposure when you shoot in the scene modes. So, being able to preview the possible combinations of settings without having to take a bunch of shots to experiment would be great, yes? Luckily, you can enjoy that advantage in Live View mode. As you vary the available settings, the Live View display updates to show you how the subject will be rendered. (Note that the Live View preview isn’t always 100-percent accurate, especially in terms of image brightness, but it’s fairly close.) After you choose the settings you want to use, you can exit Live View mode and take the picture using the viewfinder if you want. The following steps provide an overview of this process. Note that when you shoot in a scene mode that offers both Ambience and Lighting/Scene Type adjustments (that is, Portrait, Landscape, Sports, and Close-up modes), Canon recommends that you tackle the Lighting/Scene type setting first, so that's the approach I take in the steps. 1. Set the Mode dial to Close-up mode.

More about how things work in the other scene modes later; for now, stick with Close-up.

2. Press the Live View button to shift to Live View mode. 3. Press the Q button to shift to the Quick Control display. 4. Select the Light or Scene Type option, as shown on the left in the figure.

Remember that this setting is available only in Close-up, Portrait, Sports, and Landscape modes. Assuming that you're using one of those modes, the name of the current setting is shown on the left side of the screen. For example, in the first screen, the Default setting is selected. The text at the bottom of the screen reminds you that you're adjusting the light/scene type setting.

5. Rotate the Main dial to cycle through the settings.

Depending on the lighting conditions, you may not see significant changes for some settings. In the example, the Default setting added a slight warm color cast, which I eliminated by shifting to the Tungsten Light option. If your subject is lit by multiple light sources, choose the most prominent one or just keep experimenting until colors look the most accurate.

6. Press the up or down cross key to select the Ambience option, labeled here.

By default, the Standard setting is used.

7. Rotate the Main dial to change the setting.

As soon as you rotate the dial, you see the impact of the newly selected ambience setting on the scene. For example, on the left side of the figure, the preview shows the result of changing from the Standard setting to the Vivid setting. In addition, the Effect setting, which determines the level at which the adjustment is applied, becomes available. I labeled this option on the right side.

8. Use the cross keys to select the Effect setting and rotate the Main dial or press the left/right cross keys to set the level of the adjustment.

The Effect display indicates the adjustment level. For example, in the left screen, the Effect level is Standard; on the right, I raised the setting to Strong (three notches).

9. Exit the Quick Control screen by pressing the Q button.

You're now ready to take the picture. Again, you can exit Live View mode if you prefer; the settings you just dialed in stay in force for both Live View and viewfinder shooting until you change them.

Now for the promised details about adjusting these settings in modes other than Close-up:
  • Portrait, Landscape, and Sports: Things work just as they do for Close-up mode (described in the preceding steps). However, Landscape does not offer the Fluorescent and Tungsten options for the Lighting or Scene Type setting.
  • Night Portrait and Food: You lose access to the Lighting or Scene Type option. In Food mode, however, you can adjust colors through the Color Tone option. Use the cross keys to select that option and then press the right and left cross keys or rotate the Main dial to move the slider toward the blue or red side of the color bar, depending on whether you want colors cooler or warmer.

If you already know what settings you want to use, you can get the job done more quickly by staying out of Live View mode and just using the Quick Control screen to adjust the options. The left screen here shows you where to look for the Ambience and Lighting or Scene Type options. Again, the latter is not available in Night Portrait mode, and in Food mode, it's replaced by the Color Tone option, shown on the right in the figure.

For the Ambience and Lighting or Scene Type options, you also can highlight the option on the Quick Control screen and then press Set to display a list of all the available settings. After highlighting the setting you want to use, press Set to return to the Quick Control screen.

Canon Articles

How to Shoot in the Canon EOS Rebel T7/2000D Auto and Flash Off Modes

For the simplest camera operation, set the Canon EOS Rebel T7/2000D camera to Scene Intelligent Auto mode, as shown. Or, if you're shooting in an environment that doesn't permit flash, choose Flash Off, represented by the symbol labeled in the figure. This mode works the same as Scene Intelligent Auto but, as its name promises, prevents the flash from firing.

The name Scene Intelligent Auto stems from the fact the camera uses its digital brain to analyze the scene — it's an intelligent camera, see — and then selects the most appropriate settings for that scene.

Although the camera handles most picture-taking chores for you in both modes, you need to consider a few settings, starting with whether you want to use the viewfinder to compose the photo or enable Live View, which sends a live preview of the subject to the camera monitor. Your choice makes a difference in how the camera's autofocusing system works and, therefore, how you take the picture.

Both sets of instructions assume that you're using the camera's default settings. To restore the defaults, set the Mode dial to P, Tv, Av, or M and then choose Clear Settings from Setup Menu 3. (You can't access this menu option in any of the point-and-shoot modes.)

Viewfinder photography in Scene Intelligent Auto and Flash Off modes

The following steps show you how to take a picture using Scene Intelligent Auto or Flash Off exposure modes, relying on the default camera settings and autofocusing. If your lens doesn't autofocus with the T7/2000D, ignore the focusing instructions and focus manually. 1. Set the Mode dial to Scene Intelligent Auto.

Or, for flash-free photography, select the Flash Off mode.

2. Set the lens focusing method to autofocusing.

On the 18–55mm kit lens, set the switch to AF.

3. Looking through the viewfinder, frame the image so that your subject appears under an autofocus point.

The autofocus points are the nine rectangles scattered around the viewfinder frame, as shown.

Framing your subject so that it falls under the center autofocus point (labeled in the figure) typically produces the fastest and most accurate autofocusing.

4. Press and hold the shutter button halfway down.

The camera’s autofocus and autoexposure meters begin to do their thing. In Auto exposure mode, the flash pops up if the camera thinks additional light is needed. Additionally, the flash may emit an AF-assist beam, a few rapid pulses of light designed to help the autofocusing mechanism find its target.

When the camera establishes focus, one or more of the autofocus points blink red to indicate which areas of the frame are in focus. In the following figure, for example, the focus points on the horse's face are lit.

In most cases, you also hear a tiny beep, and the focus indicator in the viewfinder lights, as shown. Focus is locked as long as you keep the shutter button halfway down.

If the camera senses motion in front of the lens, however, you may hear a series of small beeps, and the viewfinder's focus lamp may not light. Both signals mean that the camera switched to continuous autofocusing, which adjusts focus as necessary up to the time you take the picture. Your only job in this scenario is to keep the subject framed within the area covered by the autofocus points.

5. Press the shutter button the rest of the way down to take the photo.

When the recording process is finished, the picture appears briefly on the camera monitor.

A few more pointers about shooting in Scene Intelligent Auto and Flash Off modes:
  • Exposure: After the camera meters exposure, it displays its chosen exposure settings at the bottom of the viewfinder, as shown in Figure 3-3. You can ignore all this data except for the shutter speed value, labeled in the figure. In dim lighting, that value may blink, which is the camera’s way of alerting you that the shutter speed may be slow enough that handholding the camera is risky. Any movement of the camera during the exposure can blur the image, so when you see the blinking shutter speed, use a tripod. Typically, this issue arises only when you use Flash Off mode in dim lighting. In Scene Intelligent Auto mode, the camera’s flash provides sufficient light to keep the shutter speed fast enough that most people can handhold the camera (although it never hurts to use a tripod just in case). Turning on Image Stabilization, which compensates for minor camera shake, also helps. On the kit lens, set the Stabilizer switch to the On position to take advantage of this feature. Keep in mind that if your subject moves during a long exposure, it may appear blurry regardless of whether you use a tripod.

Additionally, dim lighting may force the camera to use a high ISO setting, which increases the camera’s sensitivity to light. Unfortunately, a high ISO can create noise, a defect that makes your picture look grainy.

  • Drive mode: By default, the camera uses the Single mode, which means you get one picture for each press of the shutter button. Your other choices are to use either the standard Self-Timer mode (10-second delay) or the continuous Self-Timer mode (record up to nine frames with each press of the shutter button). To change the setting, press the left cross key or use the Quick Control screen.
  • Flash: The built-in flash has a relatively short reach, so if the flash fires but your picture is still too dark, move closer to the subject. In Scene Intelligent Auto mode, you can set the flash to the Red-Eye Reduction mode (the control lives on Shooting Menu 1), but you can't disable flash. To go flash free, you have to set the Mode dial to the Flash Off setting.

Live View photography in Scene Intelligent Auto and Flash Off modes

Follow these steps to take a picture in Live View mode using autofocusing and the default settings for Scene Intelligent Auto and Auto Flash Off modes: 1. Set the Mode dial to Scene Intelligent Auto or Flash Off. 2. Set the lens focusing method to autofocusing.

On the 18–55mm kit lens, set the switch to AF.

3. Press the Live View button to engage Live View.

The viewfinder goes to sleep, and the scene in front of the lens appears on the monitor. What data you see superimposed on top of the scene depends on your display mode; press DISP to cycle through the available displays.

If you press the Live View button and nothing happens, Live View may be disabled. To turn it back on, press the Menu button, pull up Shooting Menu 4, and set the Live View Shooting option to Enable.

4. Focus.

By default, the camera uses a Live View autofocusing option called FlexiZone-Single. In this mode, you use the cross keys to move the focus frame, labeled, over your subject. Then press the shutter button halfway and hold it there to initiate autofocusing. When focus is achieved, the focus frame turns green and the camera beeps, signifying that you're ready to shoot.

5. Press the shutter button fully to take the shot.

You see your just-captured image on the monitor for a few seconds before the Live View preview returns.

6. To exit the Live View preview, press the Live View button.

You can then return to framing your images through the viewfinder.