Canon R50 Beginners Guide - How-To Use Camera Step By Step

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hey guys how's it going it's Jay and today I'm gonna go over the Canon R50 now this is a beginner's guide so this is for those of you that are new to the camera and you you know you're not exactly sure how to use it um it's kind of overwhelming with all the settings and features and you know you invested in this and you really want to harness the power of the R50 well this is the video for you like if you really need to start from the beginning and work your way through all these amazing features that this camera offers I'm going to help you with that so don't worry I'm going to go nice and slow um I explain it and I build as I go so even if you're starting off knowing absolutely nothing you guys will get a tremendous amount of value out of this video so all right so this video is going to be very lengthy it's going to be probably over an hour so if you guys don't have that time and you just want to get up and running as fast as possible I made a quick start guide for the Canon R50 now that also assumes that you're a beginner so I'll set you up and you're pretty much in full auto mode and you can get out there and start using your camera right away below the video in the description area I'm going to have time stamps to break up like the different topics so I'm going to start off you know showing you how it works go around the body then I'm going to talk about using the camera in full auto mode because that's probably what most beginners are going to start off doing with this camera and then I will expand off to the more powerful modes such as program auto shutter priority aperture priority manual mode and you also have scene mode and a couple other things like video of course so let's just get right into it guys alright guys so as you can see here I got the kit with the 55 to two 10 millimeter lens and the 18 to 45 millimeter lens so I got a nice range here telephoto zoom and a regular Zoom so pretty much everything is covered so I went for that kit it was just over a thousand for all of this stuff so let me just go over this really quick so what you have here is the charger for the battery so the battery just goes into the charger like that and then you can pull this little thing out and plug plug it into the wall that's how the charger works now when it's charging it'll light up orange when it's fully charged this light will light up green so that's how that works now we also have the lens like this is the 18 to 45 so you can see how small this lens is and then you have the 55 to 210 which is quite a bit larger and then we have here the neck strap I am not going to put this on though but the next strap I highly recommend putting it on when you get a second it just weaves through these little metal brackets on the side of the camera here that'll allow you to like hang the camera on your neck and stuff if you don't have like a wrist strap or another neck strap then you're going to use highly recommend putting this one on because you could bump into something and the camera can fall out of your hand so you really do want some kind of strap all right guys so I'm just going to move the lenses out of the way for a second and let me just talk about this memory card so the Canon R50 has a UHS one card slot so this is a UHS one card so uh S1 cards are a little bit slower than UHS 2 cards so a lot of the newer more professional cameras have UHS 2 card slots what's cool about that is you can get these memory cards for much cheaper you know so it's it's just great for beginners in my opinion that don't necessarily need the faster cards because they are more expensive now you do still get benefit if you want to buy a UHS 2 card because when you transfer the files using a memory card reader for example to your computer a UHS 2 card will take advantage of that speed and you'll be able to transfer your files your photos and videos way faster with a UHS 2 card in a fast reader but again if you're just plugging your camera into your computer then you're not really going to see any benefit so I would probably still get a uh S2 card just because it's faster when transferring files but if you're on a budget you don't have to you can get away with one of these so that's this is what I've been using the whole time using the Canon R50 so let me just show you how this goes in now on the bottom of the camera here we have a door it's got a little slide lever here and you just pop it open like so so when you open the door it looks like this and you can see there's that slot there for the memory card and it goes in like this if you're looking at it from this perspective just slides in and it kind of clicks into place now the battery goes in the same way if you're looking at the battery it looks like this pushes down and it clicks in and you can see this little gray lever that will release the battery if you need to take the battery out to charge it and then if you close the lid you just have to slide this little thing over and that locks the door now also on the bottom by the way this is the tripod mount plate or if you have a mini tripod you could screw it onto this it's just a quarter thread is what this is all right so looking at the side of the camera here you got a grip it's a pretty nice grip it's got some nice ergonomics to it but it's not very deep so it's a little bit hard to wrap your fingers around so I find holding it like this seems to work the best for me because you can't really grab it like this where you would with a larger grip so I kind of just turn my hand like that and you can see I'm resting my thumb on the thumb rest right here now just going around the camera a little bit I just want to go over some of these ports really quick over here what you got is the USB C Port now you can use this for charging you could use this for transferring files and you can also use it if you hook the camera up as a webcam now down here you have an HDMI a micro HDMI port if you want to hook up this up to a television or an external monitor for example Apple if you go over to the other side we have a mic Port as you can see right there it's just like one of those standard mic ports there's no headphone jack on this camera just so you're aware now just a quick look at the back we have the viewfinder here there's an adjustment for the viewfinder underneath right here so you can adjust for your vision if you wear glasses you could slide this left and right and that will adjust the lens in there for your vision and the viewfinder if you're not aware is just basically like a little TV that shows you what you're seeing it does the same thing as the screen but it's way better in super bright conditions because when it's really bright outside you just can't see the screen that good now the Canon screens are very good so you can see them better than let's say the Sony screens but the viewfinder is way better if you're tracking moving subjects and things like that so keep that in mind so you can just put this up to your eye like this and that's how you can do it now if you're wearing glasses you can pull them up and really get your eye close so also looking at the back here you have this LCD screen it's a really nice screen and what's cool about this screen is if you swivel it like that you could now use the camera in selfie mode so this is how you would use the camera in selfie mode and another cool thing is the screen swivels so you can swivel it around like this so if you have the camera like over your head and you need to see the screen you can do it like that or if you have the camera like on the ground you can have it this way and this works great for when you're on a gimbal as well because you can angle it however you need it for gimbal work and stuff like that also when you close the screen this way you have like an armor mode and this is great for when you're stowing your camera and stuff so you you know just in case something bounces around your camera bag it won't scratch the screen on you highly recommend leaving the camera in armor mode if you're not using the camera especially if you're putting it in your camera bag and stuff so continuing on the back of the camera here you have a bunch of buttons now you got a menu button a playback button guys I'll go into way more detail as to what these buttons do once we turn the camera on and stuff so anyways we got a menu button playback button you have a control pad here that's a four directional control pad with a center button that acts as your enter button or set button it also so as the Q button you have an info button here and over here right by the thumb grip you have this button here which stands for Focus mode so you can kind of change the focus area and stuff with this button depending on what mode you're in and same thing with this button up here this is an exposure lock button so it just depends on what mode you're in full auto mode a lot of like a lot of these buttons don't do anything just so you're aware now moving on to the top of the camera we have here what's called a mode dial and you can spin the mode dial like so highly recommend for now just putting it in the a plus mode don't worry if you guys are more advanced you can absolutely go to the more advanced modes but if you're brand new to the camera highly recommend just putting in a mode for now because I want you guys getting out there and using the camera and having fun I don't want you frustrated getting terrible pictures because you're not exactly sure how to set the camera if you put it in auto mode when you're first starting off it's going to do a great job for you like 90 percent of the time so just set it it there for now and like I said once you get more comfortable you could then expand out to other modes so also on the top we have here a record button for recording video we have a control wheel here which will do various things when you're using the camera and stuff going through menus when you're in playback things like that now up here we have the shutter button this is how you go about taking photos now it's a two-stage button when you press the button a little bit it's going to focus for you when you press it all the way it's actually going to take the photo and over here we have an ISO button and then of course we have the on off switch right here and I really like that toggle it's a nice hard toggle so you're not going to turn the camera on and off by accident and also on top of the camera we have the flash so it's got these little tabs where you can pull it out and you can see the flash unit there so when the camera is telling you please raise flash that's what that's what you got to do you got to pull that up if you want to use the Flash and then on top of here is a smart hot shoe that you can use to mount various accessories flash units microphones things like that and also on the top of the camera right here you can see this little symbol that stands for where the sensor is so that's the sensor plane if you need to measure for macro photography and things like that and then we have a little speaker here all right guys so looking at the front of the camera here we have this this is an AF Illuminator that'll help you focus in really low light conditions a lot of times that works as a self timer as well when you're using self timer it'll blink so what we have here is the camera body cap so this protects the sensor when you don't have a lens attached so basically what we do is you just turn this and you can see this little Dash there that Dash tells you that you're lined up to the red Dash as you can see right there and that's where you would go you know when you need to put it on you can just turn it and that red Dash also is what you need to reference when you're mounting a lens now this is the aps-c sensor and you owe always want to make sure that you have that covered with either the body cap or a lens so let me show you how to mount a lens all right so now notice on the back of the lens you have these connector points and then you can see the connector points here that's how the camera communicates with the lens now if you turn the lens you're going to see how it has that little red Dash there that red Dash lines up to the red Dash on the lens mount here the RF lens mount and this is an RFS lens by the way because it's a crop factor sensor the full frame lenses are RF lenses the crop factor lenses are RFS lenses just so you're aware if you're shopping for different lenses and stuff so then what you do once you get that on there you have to twist it to the right and you'll hear a click now that click is the lens pin that holds the lens on and this is the lens release pin right here so if you squeeze the lens release pin in you could now unscrew the lens and it will unlock and look you could see the pin moving see that pin moving so that's how that works like so and the 55 to 210 will Mount the same exact way you just got to take this off and it mounts exactly like this lens uh it's just a different style lens that's all and also just so you guys are aware this lens is actually a collapsible style lens so you have to open it up before it starts working so like I said if you go past 18 that's the closed you know position right there but when you open it right there that's 18 so now you have 18 to 45 is your Zoom range and you have to manually turn this to zoom the lens so I'm just going to take the lens cap off and that's what the front of the lens looks like and also guys if you look at the front of the lens it has like writing on there and it'll tell you like what size filter thread for example so you can see right here on the bottom it says 49 millimeter and that's what size the filter thread is if you wanted to screw on like ND filters for example or a polarizer filter something like that that 49 is what the millimeter is 4 or the lens thread now this wheel here is used for manual focus and depending on the camera you can also program this for custom functions as well so here is the on and off toggle so let's turn this beast on all right so when you first turn this on you are presented with this menu here so I'm going to select English and it wants you to set the date and time so let me do that so I'm just going to click set here and the month is going to be March 26th you can just touch around here like so you can also go and select your time zone here but I'm just going to set it to the correct date and time that seems to work good click ok now it's also prompting you to connect to the Canon Connect app which will allow you to remote control the camera and also take photos and videos off the camera to your smart device now guys I have a dedicated video on the Canon Connect app so just be sure to check that video out if you want to do that so I'm in full auto mode and you can see how it pops up with this stuff letting you know like what these buttons do it gives you like a little tutorial when you first turn the camera on and that's pretty cool so it's just telling you here that you can adjust some features if you click on that button so I'm just going to click hide info I don't want this popping up every time click OK and now it's popping up with the other option here which is telling you that it's going to apply effects and stuff like that which is cool I'll show you more about that in a little while click ok and now we're presented with this very basic menu which is you know optimized for beginners now it's telling me to raise the flash remember how I showed you that earlier and that's just because I'm pointing down at the desk so it sees a very dark scene but if you turn the camera like this I'm going to just swivel it around here and now you can see I have this test chart in front of me so watch when I press the shutter you see the green coming up those are the autofocus points and it's just going to pick what it thinks you want to focus on because I'm in full auto mode and now if I press the button all the way it will take the photo as you can see there now notice these modes down here these little buttons that I showed you earlier there's three different flavors so if I click on the top icon you can see there's like three different creative type flavors I'm going to call it so you have creative assist creative assist is the one that it's in now and what that allows you to do is if you hit that little paintbrush it comes up with all these different options and it's just telling you here choose an effect from the preset and then shoot so I'm just going to click the little arrow there so it hides that and doesn't show me next time I bring that up click OK and again you have presets here on the left so you can just go through and select all these different presets which is awesome and there's a lot of them in here that you can play with so that's where you can go to do that I'm just going to leave that on default but you also have a background defocus feature so you can pretty much slide this and make the depth of field more so I want the background to be sharper then you have here brightness so you can just make the image darker or brighter you can change the contrast scroll over you got more options here you can change the saturation and let me just go into the menu and change the screen timer because it keeps timing out really quick so if I go into menu here alright guys so right here under power saving I'm going to change this and notice how it says screen dimmer is set to 10 seconds I'm going to change that to disable so it stops dimming because I'm doing this tutorial here I don't want the screen to keep dimming on me but just so you know that's where this feature is if you want to turn it on turn it off or change the timer screen off you can set that as well auto power off a set to 30 seconds and I'm going to change that to at least a minute just for now again because I'm doing this tutorial all right so again guys remember how I told you you could zoom with the lens so this is zooming in and out and you can see how the scene is changing there while I zoom now over here in the lower left we have this little icon and it looks like a little truck with an off and a little hand there if you press that that will enable touch shutter as you can see here so now if I just touch the screen it's going to focus and take the photo wherever I touch like so and that works really good and it's a cool feature so you can just disable that by touching this again now this other icon here is your image size so it's allowing you to change that you can also change it to Raw quality if you want in there by hitting info raw this is where you can turn raw quality on if you want I have it set to jpeg right now because I'm shooting in full auto and a lot of the features in full auto won't work in raw so I tend to use jpeg when I'm using full auto now if we go back up here into the creative assist area we have this other option here now this is called creative bracketing and what this does is it sets the camera up and it'll just take multiple shots and give you different looks I'll show you what I mean watch this so now if I hit the playback button that little playback on the bottom of the screen you see how there's multiple versions of this image so now if you scroll through you can see the different versions and that's what it did in that creative mode this is a cool mode because you can actually just set it to this and give you like a different look I I think that's pretty cool and you can see a couple of samples here when I was playing around at these signs and and this roof line and it's interesting how the different filters will give you different textures and stuff so that's pretty fun to play with I recommend checking that out if we go back in here and we go over to the right one we have more advanced processing based on scene detection so I'm going to select ok so now you'll see that it's flashing up here and that's telling you what scene the camera is recognizing so right now it's showing me this little Sun scene I don't really know what that scene is off the top of my head but if we go and take the photo it actually took multiple images and now it's doing processing and it's going to try to give you the best image possible so that's how that works and if I zoom in here notice how it switched to macro mode now because it thinks that it's a macro scene and you hear that it just took like 10 shots or whatever so it's just doing AI based stuff so you can see here this little es came up on the screen that stands for electronic shutter so in this mode it switched to electronic shutter rattled off a bunch of shots and it's trying to give the best macro shot possible based on how the programming algorithm inside the camera works so that is pretty much how full auto mode works and let me just go into the menu here and show you what full auto mode looks like when in the menu because the menu actually changes now if we scroll here to the left to the camera notice how there's only five like sub tabs so that's because we're in full auto mode but if you go in here you can change a bunch of stuff so you have shooting mode here assist mode image size still image aspect ratio you can change the way this looks if you guys want a square image you can do one to one for example if you want an eight by ten crop you could do a four by three for example I'm just going to click OK by the way guys I'm just hitting this cue button set button for ok if you don't want to touch the OK button on the screen that's what I'm hitting is the center button here all right so I'm just going to put it back to the automatic creative assist mode I like that one the best I'm just going to put it back there and I'm going to click ok now also notice this little magnifying glass up here you can select that and it'll zoom in for you so you can just double check your focus and make sure that what you're seeing is what you want zoom in more as you can see there it's like super zoomed it's going to turn touch shutter back off there we go so now touch shutter is disabled you can see there and you can see my little icon it looks like that little truck again so that's where we're at with touch shutter all right guys so again we're in full auto mode here and there's a couple of other features that I just wanted to show you you can hit the info button here and it'll bring up more information it'll actually change the way the screen looks so that right there is an auto leveler which is really cool it'll actually let you know if the camera is level and a great feature if you hit info again now the screen is just off this is minimal and this is more stuff which I actually like I like having it set here and or here I like seeing the histogram as well when doing more advanced shooting so that's what the info button does now one other thing I want to show you is this button over here it stands for Drive modes and if you click on this button it's set to single shooting by default but if you guys want to take rapid fire like Fast shooting like high speed you're tracking moving subjects Sports and stuff like that this is where you would go to do that now you got high speed continuous let me set it to that and I'll show you what I mean if I just point and shoot at the Target now so that's rapid fire mode and there's different speeds like there's High plus that'll go faster as you can see here and you can go really slow with the low speed one now here is where self timer is so that'll just set a self timer for you which is quite nice as you can see here that's the self timer and you can see the AF Illuminator flashing so if you're trying to do a self portrait and things like that that's where you would go and then you have self timer continuous so you can actually do the same thing but it'll take multiple shots for you so this is great for doing like family portraits and stuff because someone always has their eyes closed so you could set that self timer and then you can go you know say take four shots and select it and now if we go it's given us a long time here it's 10 seconds so watch this see that so it did a 10 second timer and then it took four shots so that's a good way to go again if you're taking family portraits and things like that depending on what you're up to you know so I'm just going to put it back to single shooting all right so again in the menu here we are kind of limited because we're in full auto mode but if you scroll through you can use the control wheel here on the top or you can use this directional pad or you can just touch and you know drag even you could do all sorts of ways to navigate this and there's a lot of features in this camera so when I go into the more advanced modes there's even more features but in full auto mode this is what it looks like so you have your image quality here aspect ratio like I was saying heavier drive mode release without card so this will actually just let you take a photo if you don't have a memory card in there now image stabilization mode you can go in here and you can turn image stabilization on digital stabilization you can also turn on but it'll actually crop in a little bit I'm just going to click menu to go back this is touch shutter I already showed you that on the screen with that little button on the bottom you got image review now when you take a photo the image will come up on the screen for a second or two that's what image review is and that's turned on and it's set to two seconds so I actually normally turn that off on my cameras but a lot of people like that feature so I'd recommend leaving it on viewfinder display means you'll actually see the image preview in the viewfinder so that's disabled by default because you know it assumes you're tracking moving subjects you're not going to want the preview coming up that'll be really distracting shooting info display so this will just show all the different stuff on the screen when you're navigating and you hit the info button you can turn on a grid for the rule of thirds which will help you compose and things like that the histogram you can change and change the size of it which is quite nice it's got an RGB option and a large small option I like that lens info display and manual mode it'll give you the focus distance focal length it'll tell you what the lens focal length is which I really like now reverse display that will like flip the display around so if you want it in like mirror mode you can go and use that option now you can also change the way your display looks because the viewfinder is so small it's kind of hard to see the edges when you have your eye up to it especially if you're using glasses if you don't if you're not using glasses you can get your eye really close it's a little easier to see but again if using glasses display 2 is a little bit better because it just crops in that little bit so you can see the edges better movie record settings this is where you can go and change your movie record settings I recommend going in here and setting it to 4K I mean you got a 4k camera you might not want the 4K because it'll fill up your memory card really quick but this is the feature that I use most 4K at 24 ipb for this particular camera but you have the 60 frames per second option for HD and then of course you have the 30p 4K option as well now shutter button function when you're in movie mode if you press the shutter it will like reactivate the focus for you so that's what it's doing by default now if we go in here you can see how there's a bunch of stuff that's grayed out and again that's because we're in full auto mode preview AF is enabled AF assist beam is on that's that light that lights up you saw a minute ago with the self timer playback mode this is where you can go in and you can look at your photos and videos that you have stored on the camera and you can delete them you can protect them things like that you could rate them print order creative assist and go in here and you can play with the creative syst options playback creative filters red eye correction you could resize the images you could crop the images a little bit of uh post-production work you can do here on camera you can create a slideshow which is really cool especially if you have a HDMI cable plugged into a TV or something and then you have image jump so if you turn with the dial on the top here it'll jump 10 images as opposed to just hitting this left right option playback information you can turn that on and off AF Point display I like to enable that and when you enable that when you go into the playback menu it'll show you where the AF points were you can see here they're lit up red if we disable that and we hit playback see how those aren't there now so I really like that because if you're focusing on like a human and you want to make sure that it focused on the eye you know iaf you can go into the playback and you can see that it was on the eye and it's just a quick reference like all right that focus is probably perfect because it was on the eye so I always enable this but like you like I just showed you it can be a little bit much on a shot like this so you might want to turn that off depending on what Focus mode you're using and things like that you can turn that on again if you're going to an HDR TV and your record and you're playing back HDR footage you can turn that on there now in here is where your like connection options are and this is where you would go to connect to your smartphone and all sorts of stuff like that you got a wireless remote option you got the EOS utility print from from wi-fi printer Advanced connections airplane mode Wi-Fi settings Bluetooth camera name you got GPS settings here reset communication settings this is where you can go and turn off Bluetooth and things like that if you had it connected to an old phone whatever the case may be and remember guys I have that quick connect Canon app tutorial that'll show you how to use some of these features in detail I'm not going to cover it in this video though because I made a whole dedicated video on the app which is really awesome by the way now up here we have the wrench icon and this is where some of the more advanced settings are located so file numbering you can change the folder that your files are saved in this is where you can go and format your memory card now auto rotate if you're in vertical format versus landscape this is where you can go and change that you can add the rotation info to the file so if you bring it into a post editor it'll automatically recognize the orientation date and time we already went over that here's where your Inc language settings are now on page two this is where you can go and set the camera for ntsc or Pal mode so if you guys are looking for 50 frames per second 25 frames per second if you're you know a pal region user you're going to expect to see those frame rates this is where you would go to change that in North America regions you are set to ntsc and that gives you 24 frames 30 frames 60 frames now mode guide you can have that enabled or disabled and that when you turn the mode dial it'll tell you what each mode is it's feature guide same thing beeping you can turn that on and off the camera beeps when you focus and stuff so I'm just leaving it enabled for now but I would recommend turning that off because the beeping is kind of annoying you can change the volume here power saving I already showed you when I changed the screen dim timer now screen view display you have a bunch of different options in here you can go in here and change that and uh it's pretty powerful you can set it to you know just have the viewfinder on only adjust the screen only for example so it won't switch to the viewfinder that's where those features are screen brightness this is another really powerful feature and if you're out in the sun you're going to want to make the brightness higher if you're in really dark conditions you might want to make the brightness like a lot lower viewfinder brightness you got options for that as well it's set to Auto but you can change that to manual if you want now here's where you can go and fine tune the viewfinder color which is amazing very powerful user interface magnification this will allow you to like zoom in on the actual screen itself and it might make it easier for you to read if you need to set that so if I double tap with two fingers you see how it zoomed in and now you can like pan around so it's a double finger tap for that feature so if you guys are having a hard time reading the screen visually impaired you can double tap and get a bigger screen I know my dad would love this feature for sure he has a dimacular degeneration so his vision is really starting to go and he has like a magnifying glass to see like small text so this feature would be great for somebody like him HDMI resolution you can change that here touch control is set to standard you have sensitive and disable so if you guys do not want touch if you are somebody that hates touch or you keep touching and it's messing you up you can turn that off here and then you have a USB app connection option there battery info if you go in here it'll tell you how much battery life is left and what kind of battery and so forth now here is an option to go to the manual which is really cool on your phone go over this image it'll bring you right to the manual so now you have access to the manual on your phone easily and here's the current firmware version so that is a basic menu breakdown when in full auto mode so now what we're going to do is we're going to change the camera to program auto mode now program auto mode as you can see here it gives you this preview of what the mode does remember that mode info option that we just saw a minute ago this is the info option so you can make this so it doesn't come up when you change modes but as you scroll through the modes it gives you like a preview here so I just want to put it in program auto mode for a second and go back into the menu to show you how much deeper the menu is you see now how it has six seven eight nine so if you go in here you're going to have a lot of other options you got HDR shooting auto light optimize there's a lot of stuff in here that wasn't in here so now you can see on page six we have Focus bracketing drive mode silent shutter function a shutter mode you can change electronic first curtain is what it's on now release shutter without card that was available in the other menu now here we got more features here display simulation Optical viewfinder simulation view assist that's pretty cool so it'll make the viewfinder pretend it's an optical viewfinder that's a really interesting feature and that's great if you're using off camera flash if you're using off camera flash you are going to want that on movie recordings got a bunch of other features in here so now on AF we have AF area as you can see here you can go in and you can change all the different autofocus areas all right so this is what it looks like when in program Auto and remember I can change this screen by hitting this info button and it'll give you a lot more info as you can cycle through there like so now also in full auto you can hit this Q button here in the center and it brings up all this stuff so now you have like an a tremendous amount of power in program Auto and program Auto is basically full auto mode the camera's still going to do like all the thinking for you but it gives you like more power if you need it and an example of where you would need more power remember how I told you like full auto will work like 90 of the time well I was out there shooting and I'll show you these photos as I'm talking here I was trying to take a photo of this sign through branches and in full auto mode even touching the screen around I was touching just to try to get it to focus where I wanted it just wouldn't work it kept focusing on the branches so what I did was I switched to program auto mode and then I hit this button over here to change the focus area so this button here is the button to do that and now if you hit this little icon you can change your focus area and what I did was I selected this one here single point so now the camera is only going to focus on this one point at a time and that's what I set the camera to so for example if I go to focus now so you can see that single point it's limited to that that one area and that's all it can focus on so if I select over here it could only focus on that single point area and this is where you would need you know if the camera is not focusing on what you want you would need to go in there and change that now you can get to that from the queue menu as well it's this top left button that's where you can go so this is spot AF you got one point you got expand you have expand AF area around and you can see let me just hit my info button to clean this up a little bit so look at what this one looks like you see how it's a square and it has the expandable points so this is great for tracking moving subjects in particular this one on the right is whole area AF so this will use the entire screen and that's what it's set to by default so when in full auto of course if you want to hit record all you have to do is hit the record button like so and you can hit that again to stop recording and again if I go back into program auto mode here it works the same way you press the button like this to focus push it down to take the photo and then hit record if you want to record video it works exactly the same way in program Auto like so all right so again looking at the back of the screen you can hit the info button to display the change the way the display looks this is the more simplistic look here but check this out you can just touch around and change this stuff so this is the exposure compensation so you can change that to raise the exposure comp if you want and this is basically brightening the scene or darkening the scene and you remember in full auto mode it had the option in the creative assist to change the brightness and the color and stuff like that you can this in program auto mode you have like the more traditional camera tools to do those sort of things and you can also change the iso here so auto ISO is what it's set to automatically by default but you can hard set that to like 100 for example so again program auto mode is giving you more power it's like a full auto mode that gives you more power and it also has the touch shutter option here and notice how it says 28 there that's the camera zoom so if you zoom the camera in you can see it's changing now it's at 45 millimeter now it's all the way at 18 millimeter and just the weight of the camera is like pushing it to 24. and remember you could hit this set slash Q button or you can hit the queue button up here and that brings up the Q menu so now going through this queue menu so if you select one of the options on the left or right side the variables for that option will come up on the bottom so if I select one shot for example you can see now on the bottom these are the different options so one shot is you basically press the focus button it'll lock once it focuses and then you'll take the photo it won't continually Focus all right so AI Focus will basically choose whether to use one shot or Servo now Servo will constantly Focus so that's great for moving subjects the focus will just constantly be like monitoring and tracking so it uses Servo in video mode but again if you're trying to track moving subjects in photography mode you would want to use Servo but you can use AI focus and the camera will decide whether it needs to be in continuous or one shot probably leaving AI Focus for the most part so now if we go to the next option here we have subject to detect now you can select auto here and the camera will just analyze what you're doing and try to figure it out for you but you can also hard set it so you have animals here you have people you have automobiles so I'm just going to put that back to Auto auto seem to do a pretty good job now over here the next option again this is going to be your image size and you can change it here you can enable raw if you click that option this is where you can enable the raw by the way this is compressed raw and this is regular raw so the compressed raw will just be a smaller file size than regular Raw trying to save memory card space now this next feature here is metering mode so what metering mode is it's basically how the camera determines how bright to expose the scene so it analyzes the scene and it'll use in this case it'll use like the entire sensor to try to evaluate how bright or dark the exposure needs to be if you set it here the camera will just use mostly the center area of the screen if you set it here the camera will use just a tiny little spot for exposure so why you might want to use this is if you're trying to expose for something that's extremely bright like a light bulb or a wedding dress or frothy white water in direct sunlight for example you can use these metering mode tools to help you with that and you can see here what the meter looks like on spot mode you see how it's like a circle I'm just going to put it back to evaluate metering and now over here you have a back button that'll bring you back it'll bring you out of the queue menu now you have this Flickr option here anti-flicker shoot you could turn that on and off if you guys are having problems with flickering lights so this is a pretty cool feature if you're having those issues white balance white balance controls how the camera decides what white is like is white like going to be like a little bit bluish or a little bit yellowish that would be like warm and cool white balance is what determines that so right now it's set to Auto white balance but you can set the camera hard set to like sunny weather and that if the sun's out you can just hard set it to that if you're in shade you can set it to that cloudy you can set it to that when you guys are recording videos in a constant lighting environment I highly recommend hard setting this because sometimes Auto white balance will fluctuate so if somebody walks into the scene and they're wearing like all blue or something like that that might trigger the auto white balance to shift the colors a little bit and that doesn't look very good when recording video or when you're taking photos even you know if you're in a party uh and you're just taking photos of different people if the auto white balance keeps changing it's not going to look good skin tones are going to look good in one shot not good in the next shot so this is why you would want to hard set your white balance so that's what that does now down here we have picture style you can go in here and you have standard and these are just different styles and it'll give you a clue as to what each of these do now you have portrait and again you can see these numbers changing you can actually go in here and dial in these settings so you can manipulate this and create your own looks so I highly recommend playing with this stuff because if you just want to get the best possible quality straight off the camera and you're shooting jpeg for example you want the camera to do all the work for you you can go in here and really dial in these settings and get the camera to produce exactly what you want straight off the camera you know if you're shooting Landscapes this will emphasize the greens and the Blues and fine detail make images a little bit sharper for example then you have neutral so if you're shooting raw or JPEG and you want to do your editing you know post processing you can go for a neutral look and it'll just be like won't be as saturated um not as sharp it'll allow you to do that after the fact if you want so a lot of times people don't like jpeg images because they're like overdone or overcooked some will say they look too sharp too much color this is where you can go in and change that stuff so like I said neutral is a good place to go and you got faithful monochrome and then you have user defined so you have a couple of presets here that you can make I'm actually going to put it on standard because that's what I tend to use and I don't really want it changing depending on the image I just like to leave it as standard for now so that's what I'm going to do there now if we go to the next option here we have creative filters now this is pretty cool and it's pretty fun you can go in here and we got a bunch of different filter options you can scroll through them you got grainy black and white soft focus fisheye effect art bold effect water painting and so forth that's what those options are and then here is your aspect ratio if you need to change that all right guys one other thing I wanted to show you here was the afmf button here you can see that that's how you would switch the camera into manual focus so if I switch it to MF mode like right here and you can see this scale comes up now watch this so now if I turn this ring you can see how it's manually focusing see that so this is the manual focus this is the zoom and then this one will allow you to dial in the manual focus as you can see here and it gives you this cool scale right on the screen something like that and there you have it and also note how it says MF there on the top left so you can see that and I'll just hit this button again switch it back to AF for autofocus so program auto mode basically just gives you way more power even though it's a full auto mode and you can see in the menu system how a lot of that stuff that was grayed out is no longer grayed out let me show you some of these more advanced auto modes if we go over here to this mode here hybrid Auto so hybrid Auto as you can see here because I have the description enabled it creates a digest movie with your stills and if you click that it gives you more information clips of scenes before each shot are combined into a digest movie now I play with this it's actually a pretty fun feature so if you're just walking around the town and you're taking some photos and stuff when you go to take the photo the camera will actually record for like two seconds before you take the photo and it'll like turn that into a movie so it'll show you like a two second clip then it'll show the snapshot you actually took and then it puts that into a movie now it still keeps the photo separate on the memory card but it also gives you this like Montage movie which is cool you know it's just a cool feature you might not ever use this but I think it's a I'm glad they included it with this camera because it's just fun you know doing stuff like this so and that's what it's about having fun out there you know so that's what that feature does if we go to scene mode here the scn mode if you hit this little arrow it'll tell you by selecting the scene you can shoot images with cameras Auto configurations and optimal settings now you can go in here and choose the scene now you remember before when I had it in full auto um enhanced mode how on the top left it showed that macro symbol and it also showed the picture of the Sun that was like the camera detecting the scene so this is sort of the same thing except this gives you the power to pick the scene yourself so you can go in here and hard set the scene to whatever you want group photo Landscapes you got Panorama now Panorama will allow you to if I hit let's just select ok so it you could set the direction and stuff like that and vibration sound may occur when stabilization panning for panoramas Okay click ok so Panorama notice how it has an arrow here and you can see how there's like this like gray like shaded area there so it's showing you like what to do so you would basically start like this start firing and then like move around like that now it's not obviously not going to work in this environment you really need to be standing and you can get a nice cool Pano like you know and it really works well the Sony cameras have this also um some of the more beginner oriented cameras and uh that's what panorama mode does all right so to get back into the scene selection you can just click that icon on the top left and now you have an option for sports so guys again if you're not sure how to set the camera up this is a great way to go set it to scene mode select Sports and then take pictures of sports so full auto again will detect that that's what you're doing but this is a more powerful way to do it so this is like hard setting the camera to sports mode and uh then you got a kids mode this is great if you're trying to track your kids running around you know how difficult shots like that can be and that's one of the reasons you bought a nice camera like this so set it to Kids Mode if you're taking photos of children and this will really help you out and then of course you have panning mode which will allow you to pan and it'll slow the shutter down for you giving you that little bit of motion blur effect and the camera is going to take care of the settings for you you got macro Close Up Food photography handheld night scene so this will actually take multiple photos hand holding combine those images and give you a really nice clean sharp result so really low noise and it'll sharpen up any little blur that you might have from hand holding and then of course you have HDR backlit control so if somebody's backlit by something really bright and you want them you know their face to be exposed properly and as well you can go to HDR backlit control and then of course you have silent shutter so this would be silent mode if you're inside you know at a wedding or something like that you want to take photos but you want to be quiet you can set it to silent mode now if we go to the next mode creative filters creative filters I already showed you from the Q menu and that just allows you to go in and select your different filters so this is just a different way of looking at it and you can see here we got all sorts of cool effects as you can see so that's what that feature does then of course you have movie mode so now movie recording you can also select your mode so if you go to choose mode there this is what you got you got movie Auto exposure so this will do all the thinking for you now you have manual exposure this is where you would go if you're more familiar with changing camera settings and stuff like that you can manipulate the shutter speed change the exposure aperture things like that then movie for close-up demos if you're doing products and you want to hold products up in front of the camera you would you could set the camera to this mode and the basically the camera will not get confused focusing on your face and it'll focus on the product now you have movie is mode so it'll enable image stabilization it might crop in just a little bit on you but it'll give you a more smoother shot if you're walking with the camera and it just takes the thinking out of it for you you don't have to know that you have to enable active stabilization now you got HDR movies so this is another advanced mode if you want to try that out so in movie mode you also have the quick menu and notice how it's a little bit different than what it looked like when in photography mode so you have video specific features more so like image stabilization over here you have your frame rate option here movie record size that you can play with if you want now if we go into the menu while in video mode notice how you have this option here that was not here before called high frame rate mode High frame rate mode is how you get the camera into a hundred frames per second 120 frames per second so if we go in there and we hit enable note that audio is not recorded in this mode so you will not have sound now that we have high frame rate on notice how we have 120p there so that's 120p and it has a compressed version and a regular version ipb and ipb Lite and you can notice how much longer you can record with ipb Lite so you got 14 and a half minutes approximately and it pretty much doubles when you record an ipv light so that's how high frame rate mode works and you know I like that it has the high frame rate mode but I wish it was just part of the other frame rate modes because you have to actually enable it you know so now I have to actually go and turn this off in order to get back to the regular frame rate modes and look what it does it defaults it back to the wrong frame rate like not the one I was using last so you have to go in here and actually change it back so I have to go back to 4K 24p right there which is the one that I like to use most so that's how you do slow motion video with high frame rate now one other thing I wanted to show you here is if you keep going to the right you have time lapse movie option and if you go in here you can enable it it's got a bunch of different scenes here presets or you can just go straight up custom and if you hit set you can go in here and you can customize the settings alright guys so for these last modes the manual aperture and shutter speed I'm going to go into the lab and set the camera up so let's go do that quick and I'll show you how those modes work all right so I have an aperture priority mode here but what I want to do is I want to go into the menu here and we do need to change something so you can see the depth of fields change on the screen while you're viewing and that's under display simulation now this is turned off by default I don't know why well it's not turned off it's just not set to depth of field so now I want exposure and depth of field so I'm going to select that and now it'll give us like a true live view like the Sony cameras do straight out of the box so now you can see the background depth of field change so when I focus it's going to open up the aperture you can see how the lights in the background are flashing that's because the aperture on the camera is actually opening up to take the photo but watch when I change the F number now so right now I'm at F 6.3 in aperture priority mode and I have the the lens zoomed all the way to 45 millimeter so when I press the shutter down you could see the bouquet balls in the background there are kind of blurry now if I focus on the background you could see the foreground dollar bill is blurry go back over there and if I take the photo that's what it looks like so that background blur is depth of field so now watch when I change the F number to like f25 you see how the background looks sharp now that's what it means by depth of field so if you want the background on the foreground sharp you would need to raise this number up to like f 16 or higher if you want the background blurry the closer you are to your subject and the further the background is from your subject the blurrier the background will be so that's pretty much what aperture priority does now for low light shooting you would want this F number as low as possible for the blurriest background possible you would want this number as low as possible now you might know if you've been shopping for lenses that the fast aperture lenses will be like f 1.4 F 1.8 for example this lens is f 6.3 at 45 millimeter so that's why the background isn't as blurry as it is in this photo for example where I'm using the Zeiss 55 millimeter F 1.8 lens all right guys so I just wanted to give you a closer look here now I'm more at the minimum Focus distance so now I'm focused on the quarter and again in aperture priority mode you could see now how blurry the background is because I'm much closer to the subject so now watch when I dial the aperture down to like F20 now you can see the background getting sharper and notice how when I go to focus you can see it blurs for a second again that's because the camera is opening up the aperture to make it easier to focus and then it's stopping it back down to what I have the aperture set to so in this case F3 F32 and that will give you like the most depth of field I wouldn't recommend going that high though I wouldn't go much higher than like 18 or 20 because you do get you do lose a little bit of quality when you go that high on the aperture but anyways that's how aperture works all right guys so we're in shutter priority mode right now and what's so cool about shutter priority is you can control time and when you can control time you can freeze action like you can see here with the water or you can actually create motion blur and you can get cool longer exposures with looks like that which is just awesome so let me show you what I mean so as you can see here by default the shutter is now controlled by the dial on the top of the camera so if I turn the dial you can see the shutter speed changing now watch what happens when I lower the shutter speed so I'm just going to lower it to like one fifth of a second now watch when I spin the fan now I just captured motion blur as you could see in the photo so you can see if I hit the info button here you can see because the shutter was set to a slow one fifth of a second that amount of time allowed the fan to spin around multiple times during that you know fraction of time so now watch what happens when I speed up the shutter let's speed it up to say one four hundredth one five hundredth of a second let's go now watch look at that it froze the action so this simulates you know trying to get somebody like a sports situation or a kid running around the yard you're going to need a faster shutter speed if you want to freeze the action and if you want motion blur you can crank that shutter speed down and the camera will do all the other thinking for you you can of course change the iso manually if you want it is set to Auto here but you can change it and again of course you have the Q menu and you can go in there and manipulate stuff as well and in the playback menu here by the way guys if you just pinch out you can pinch out like so and zoom into your pictures and then you can scroll like so it's so easy to use this touch screen interface then you can do double tap even to just bring up an image double tap again it'll zoom in all the way for you again and it's Hit menu to go back out so again that's just playback menu all right let's switch this Beast into manual mode and I'll show you what full control looks like so manual exposure just gives you full power to just expose exactly how you want and what you use here for reference is the meter in the very center here so that is your exposure meter so now Watch What Happens because I have the iso set to Auto the camera will still Auto Expose and do a pretty good job unless it runs out of usable ISO so what I want to do is change this to a hard number so let's put it at ISO 200 it's pretty dark in here let me go to 400 actually all right so now we're at ISO 400 I'm hard setting that and you can see it's underexposed you could tell it's underexposed because the screen is dark number one but number two look at that meter there see how it's all the way like by negative it's like in between three and two there so what I can do is I can slow the shutter speed down to allow more time for the light to gather at the sensor so it's just leaving that shutter open for a longer period of time and that is one way to help expose now another way would be to change the aperture so the aperture doesn't have too much room left but if I go here let me change the aperture to like f11 for example and now if I so the aperture is at f11 here so now if I change the shutter speed I'm going to have to make it much slower in order to get a proper exposure so now you can see I'm at one tenth of a second ISO 500 because the aperture is at f11 now the aperture as I already explained is the size of the lens diaphragm so f11 is going to be much smaller so it's going to be harder for the light to get through that little hole and think of it like water flowing through a hose you know the bigger the hose the faster it can flow or the easier it can flow kind of works similar to that as an analogy but check this out now I can lower the aperture to change the exposure so let me raise the shutter speed a little bit let's say I want 1 60th of a second but you can see it's too dark here so I have two options I can either raise the iso or I could lower the aperture and remember the lower the aperture number the larger the aperture hole is which will allow more light to come in so watch when I lower the aperture let's put it all the way down to let's put it all the way down at 4.5 as you can see there and now you could look at the meter and we have a proper exposure so you can use aperture to control how much light gets in shutter speed controls how much time the shutter is open and then ISO so let's crank the shutter speed up let's say we want the camera at F 4.5 and we want 5 1 500th of a second because we're in a low light gymnasium scenario and we need to capture our kid playing volleyball so our only option now because the aperture can't open anymore so I can't make that any larger or any lower of a number a faster lens you could like an F 1.8 lens for example but the kit lens only goes to f45 so the only thing we can do is raise the iso so if we go in here we can actually just put it to Auto if we want like so and that will automatically set the iso and you can see what the iso chose it shows four thousand so that's what's required for a proper exposure with this setup so that's how you would go about using manual mode and manual mode is great because you can basically control the shutter speed you know independently and all that stuff and it's a more advanced way of using the camera for those power users out there so that's pretty much how that works guys all right guys so we're still in manual mode here and I wanted to show you something else really quick if you hit the exposure comp button here on the top of this little control pad it'll switch from shutter speed to aperture to the meter here which kind of acts as exposure comp or you can just touch them you know you can always just touch this stuff of course the same thing with ISO you can just touch it now one other thing I wanted to show you is let me just go back to shutter speed now if you slow this all the way down and you go all the way past 30 it turns into bulb mode so that's how you get the bulb mode if I just touch on the quarter it'll focus there bulb mode will expose for as long as you hold the button down the shutter button so now if you're using the Canon app you can use that for bulb mode and then you won't be touching the camera but what this will allow you to do is get crazy long exposures like longer than 30 seconds so if you want to get like two minute exposures or something like a really dark conditions for example you would use bulb mode for that and again you just hold the shutter down and then as as long as you hold it you can see the countdown timer there and then when you let go it's going to be very Overexposed you can see how Overexposed it is because you know that was just way too long for this current lighting conditions so that's how bulb mode works all right so I have the camera in manual mode here I just want to go back into the menu and show you a few other items here that I didn't cover earlier let's go in here I just want to show you a few other things here you have digital teleconverter you can turn this on if you want more digital Zoom that's what that feature does over here you have ISO speed settings now if you go in here you can set your ISO right now it's set to Auto but you could set your max for auto so you can go in here and raise this all the way up if you want I would put it at like 25 600 like that so this way you can get you can actually get sharp shots and really low light conditions so I would recommend that now hdrpq this is a more advanced HDR shooting mode you can turn that on here all right so HDR shooting this is for recording video HDR mode this is like Auto HDR so if you turn this on the camera will take an auto HDR so it'll take multiple exposures and it'll combine them for you automatically and it'll Auto align the photos as well which is cool now you can set this for one shot only or you can set it for every single shot so if you're walking around and you're just shooting Auto HDR you would set it to every shot if you just have a single Sim scenario you know and you're like oh this might require Auto HDR that's where you would want to go to single shot only so now if I go and take a photo you can see it took multiple images and it's going to combine them Auto align them and that is the result so that's what HDR mode stands for and notice how it automatically turned it off because I only had it's a single shot so that's cool you can just turn it for one shot if you want or just leave it on all the time I like that auto lighting Optimizer very similar to the Sony cameras it'll just fill in the shadows a little bit for you it'll try to recover the highlights a little bit if you have that set to on there's a couple different methods and how aggressive you want to be with it highlight tone priority same situation this will just help protect the highlights you have a bunch of different options here when using hdrpq you would want to use the D plus as you can see here it's just giving you that notice there menu alright so down here you have picture style and there's a bunch of different options I showed you this from the quick menu before but this is where it is in the menu and now Clarity this is a pretty cool feature this will just give your photos a little bit more clarity you know so it adds a little bit more contrast it looks a little bit more grungy the higher you have Clarity if you want it to be a little bit softer It'll like smooth things out if you lower the clarity that'll help with skin tones and things like that it's a little smooth the skin a little bit if you lower the clarity so you can play around with those things lens aberration correction you can have this stuff turned on and off and it depends on the lens you're using with if this feature will be allowed or not like if you're using a Sigma lens or something you might not be able to do this but it does see the kit lens there so that's cool and you can also correct the lens Optimizer here if you go in there you can change the strength of it so I have it set to standard right now clicking menu to go back long exposure noise reduction if you're taking really long exposures you may want to have this on it's up to you high ISO speed noise reduction so if you have your ISO set really high remember in like low light conditions you might have to jack up the iso you can turn the this feature on and and dial in the power of the noise reduction very nice having those features and then of course you have multi-shot noise reduction that will take multiple shots combine them and it'll reduce the noise because it's taking multiple shots click OK dust delete data now if you have dust on the sensor you can delete it here by going into this option here as you can see Focus bracketing this is a cool feature if you're doing macro photography it'll allow you to bracket the photos and it'll just change the focus as you take the shot now you have silent shutter function shutter mode now here you can change it from electronic first curtain to full-fledged electronic I recommend leaving it on first curtain if you're taking photos release the shutter without the card already talked about that now image stabilization mode again this is where you can go and you can turn the digital image stabilization on this will give you a little more stabilization if you're walking around with camera recording video and stuff or if you're trying to hand hold with slower shutter speeds it'll help you there now customizing quick controls if you go in here remember the cue menu I showed you earlier this is where you can go in and change that so here are the options for the Q menu and again you can go in here and change this stuff if you want to very powerful customization on this camera even though it's like a beginner oriented entry-level camera it's still giving you a tremendous amount of power for customization which is just great because you know depending on how you like to use the camera you can manipulate these things so being able to change what's in the quick menu is super cool especially if you don't use like half the features you can put in there what you use Now display simulation I covered that in the lab you need to change that if you want to watch the depth of field change as you change your aperture so I recommend having that set to this option here exposure plus depth of field I like that Optical again if you're using flash photography all right so now ISO speed settings this is for video notice how there's a little video camera there if you go in there it'll tell you what is it what the max is so the max you can do for video is 12 800. you can't go as high as you can for photography and video mode now Auto slow shutter what this will do is if you're in super low light situations it'll actually slow the shutter speed down to help brighten the exposure a little bit so I have that on by default but you might not want that because it will slow the shutter down so you'll get a little bit of motion blur if you're moving and it the shutter slows down a lot so it just depends on what you're doing but by default that is on just so you're aware now here you can turn the eye detection off if you want if you don't want it to focus on the eye now here you can control the focus ring remember earlier I told you how it's set for manual focus but you can change that if you want on some cameras in here is where you can go and do that you can change it as a use it as a control ring as opposed to focus so that's where you would go about doing that now in here is where you could go to reset the camera if you want ISO expansion I'm going to turn that on that will allow higher ISO now custom buttons this is where you and go and customize the camera a little bit if you go into custom buttons here it'll show you how you can change things so this is the shutter button half press you can go in here and you can change the record button if you want the iso button this is a cool button to change if you want you can go in here and set it to something that you use more often as you can see here you're limited with the custom buttons on this camera but it does give you some options as you can see so you can change this button as well so this is where you would go to customize the camera if you want to some of the buttons and stuff and then again customizing the control ring you can go in there and you can mess with that and then you can clear your customization settings here or your customize settings if you want now over here on the right I want to show you this because this is the my menu area and this is awesome so we're going to want to add a tab let's click ok so now we just added a my menu tab so now if we go in here you can now add items to the my menu area so select items to register yes so we can add image quality if we want let's add image quality and we can scroll up to get to some of the options towards the end of the menu right here format card I always like to add that to my menu because I like formatting my memory card so I'm going to add that there's a ton of options in here as you can see but anyways that's what the my menu area is and now you can see in the my menu area I have these options in there so now I can just format the memory card if I want to you could see the format memory card it's almost full I don't want to format it though I have sample photos on there now you can add multiple tabs to the my menu and stuff it's very powerful and uh customizable so so many different ways to customize this camera and use it alright guys so that about wraps up the Canon R50 beginner's guide I really hope you got what you were looking for in this guide if you guys have any questions please fire away in the comments section below and I will be happy to try and help you out if you found this video helpful please do me a favor hit that thumbs up and be sure to hit that subscribe button I plan on getting the Canon R8 next and I'll do a beginner's guide on that camera as well so stay tuned I also have the Canon R6 Mark II beginner guide and the Canon r10 beginner guide if you guys have those cameras and need some assistance very similar to the R50 but just a little different so all right that's about it I will catch up with you guys next time I really appreciate you checking out my video and uh have a great day take here [Music]
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Channel: Jason Hermann
Views: 30,522
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: canon r50, canon eos r50, canon r50 video, canon r50 review, canon r50 tutorial, canon r50 hands on, canon r50 apsc, canon eos r50 mirrorless camera, beginners guide, canon r50 beginners guide, canon eos r50 tutorial, how-to use canon r50, taking photos with canon r50, recording video with canon r50, best settings canon r50, best camera under 800, canon r50 photography, canon r50 autofocus, best camera under 700
Id: gr9Qiawr_mM
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 70min 24sec (4224 seconds)
Published: Wed Apr 12 2023
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