Sony A7 III - Beginners Guide, How-To Use the Camera

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[Music] hey guys how's it goin it's Jay from Sony Alpha lab and what I got here is the Sony a7 three and in this video I'm gonna go over like a crash course beginners guide on how to use this camera and you know just the basic how to get it going you know what I mean you take it out of the box and you're not sure what to do you never had a camera like this before and it could be very overwhelming I mean there's a lot of buttons a lot of options a lot of dials and you might just want to go out there and take some pictures but you have no clue on where to even start you know what I'm saying that's what this video is for it's gonna be very basic very fundamental when you take it out of the box this is what it looks like it has this lens cap cover here it's actually another lens cap it's like a body cap and the camera sensor is behind that now this camera is a full-frame camera so it has a full-frame sensor and you can see here there's a little notch on this lid and that tells you where to line it up when you put it on and you'll also notice right here there's a white dot it's kind of hard to see because of the chrome there that's a better angle see that white dot that's what you have to line up that notch to put this cap on and if you want to mount the lens I have a lens right here this is a zeiss batis lens you'll see on the lenses the sony e-mount lenses they have a dot that you need to line up with that white dot so you just put dot-to-dot like so and that's how you mount the lens it's that simple alright so now that the lens is mounted it most lenses will have a lens hood and you could just unscrew that and you can turn it around and then put it back on and that will provide you with protection on the front of the lens element and it also will help protect for it'll help with glare and lens flaring and things like that so you always want to have your lens hood on even if you're inside and there's no Sun having it on there will offer you really good protection for the front of the lens now this is a prime lens so there's no zoom on it but it does have a focus ring so lenses have focus rings and zooms if there are zoom lens for example here's another lens this is actually a canon lens I could mount on here if I want using the meta bones adapter but notice this lens has a zoom and you can see it zooming right there so if you got the kit lens which is the 28 to 70 millimeter for example you would be able to zoom it and then you would also be able to manually focus it if you wanted to but this lens here is a prime lens that's the difference a prime lens is a fixed focal length so this is an 85 millimeter F 1 point 8 prime lens I'm just gonna leave the lens hood off for now just so it's a little bit easier to handle the camera while I'm showing you this stuff so I'm just gonna go over the camera body quick so you can see just the basic this is the mode dial this is where you select your different camera modes there's all different modes here and you can go through on the Sony help guide or you can check out my how-to videos and I have videos explaining all these modes using various cameras all the Sony cameras are pretty much the same they just have slightly different features depending on the camera model so I highly recommend just using full auto if you've never used you know a powerful camera like this before and you just want to get shooting as quick as possible just put it on full auto and leave it there for now and of course you could always expand and learn stuff like that but if you just want to get out there shooting quickly just put it on full auto and the camera will do a great job 99% of the time on the top here you have a hot shoe mount a flash will mount in this hot shoe so you need a hot shoe flash let's make some there's all different options out there sony has a whole bunch of different flash units and that's really good if you need to work in super low-light and you need more light a flash is a great accessory in that regard again looking at the top of the camera you have over here you got steady shot inside 4k this little symbol here means that's where the actual sensor is so if you're measuring minimum focus distance is and things like that you measure from the sensor and that's this line right here that would be your measurement point also you have on the top you have the stereo mic there's one there and there's another one here so you don't want to block them with your finger if you're recording video for example so be aware that then of course you have some custom buttons C 2 and C 1 these are default programs different things but you can change those that's why they're seized because they're custom you can make them pretty much whatever you want over here you have the on/off toggle so you can just toggle it like this to turn the cabinet on and off and then this is an actual button that's called your shutter button your shutter release but enough to take the photo so if you want to take a photo you hit that button and it'll take the photo it'll focus and then take the photo if you press this button halfway it'll just focus and won't take the photo but if you push it all the way down it'll just go it'll focus it'll beep and then it'll go chunk and it'll take the picture I'll show you that in a second and this is your exposure compile then on the front you have a control wheel oh also the lens this button right here in there you have to press that I'm trying to get an angle so you can see it you have to press this in order to take the lens off the lens locks on so it's locked on you can't take it off right now so you have to press this button to release the lens lock and then you could take the lens off forgot to show you that sorry I'm gonna hear how it clicks on so you have a dial here this is a control dial and by default this will control you know the aperture the shutter speed things like that and let me show you on the back here you have a few more dials there's another dial here and you can compute can control again aperture shutter speed things like that this is your exposure compensation dial so if your scene is looking a little bit dark or a little bit too bright you can dial it down or you can dial it up so that's what the exposure compile is for it's for manipulating the exposure one way or another depending on how you have the camera set now you also have here sorry there's a little bit of dust of an using this camera for a few weeks now this is the O LED or the viewfinder so you can look through there to use the camera you just put your eye up there and you can then see through the camera and then of course you have the LCD screen here which you can also use if you don't want to use the Oh le D viewfinder and the it tilts quite a bit you get a nice flexibility here you can tilt it up like that if you have the camera low and then you can tilt it down like this if you have the camera over your head a little bit all right now continuing on the back you have another custom button here C 3 you have your menu button which brings you into the ridiculous the vast menu system on this camera and then you have your record button this little orange button here it's got a little orange dot on it that's the record video so it doesn't really matter what mode you're in pretty much all the modes if you hit this it'll start recording video but notice on the mode dial you do have a video option here so that's specific for video as well but it will record video in the other modes case you're unaware now there's also a thumb toggle here you can see so you can move the focus point around and you can also navigate in the menu using this thumb toggle that works really well and then you have a control wheel here that you can turn and rotate and you can use this to change your ISO or your shutter speed or your aperture you can change that to your liking and then here you have your garbage can and it's also another custom button the center button here is another button and also this control wheel you can press in the four directions it's also buttons in four directions so there's bottom one you could make something you know on the right here it says ISO is the default and then of course you have self timer and then on the top it's the display mode and that'll change the way that the LCD displays and it'll change the way the viewfinder displays when you're looking through it it'll basically add information to the sides and it'll offer you different viewing options this button up here is auto exposure lock if you press this it'll hold the exposure and then you could then move the camera around and the exposure won't automatically change that's what that button does and then you have an AF on button here oh and we have a function button here that will bring you into the function menu alright so moving on to the side I just wanted to show you some more stuff here if you open up this door you have an HDMI port this is where you would hook up and micro HDMI cable and you could then output to a TV or whatever if you want to watch your videos on a television and you also have a headphone jack here so this is great for monitoring your audio that's what that is and then down here you have a USB C plug which is the latest USB format basically it's just faster and better and it's bi-directional so you don't have to put the cable in in a direction but what comes with the camera is this cable this is a regular USB cable so it goes - like microUSB and that actually plugs in right here and you could see it is directional so this would plug in here like so and it's a little bit hard to get in because of this when he when the camera is new this lid thing is kind of a little bit in the way so it's a little bit awkward to get in but you basically just get that in there like that and then this side plugs into this which is your charger you just plug that in there and then you can plug this in the wall and charge the battery and I will show you how to put the battery in in a second and this is where you put the neck strap it goes through here and there's one on the other side and then there's another door here with even more stuff so that's the microphone jack if you're recording audio you can have a hot shoe mounted microphone if you want or many other solutions are out there but that's the mic jack very nice feature alright so moving on to this side well we got here there's a little lever right there see that a little slide lever if you slide that down this door pops open and you have dual card slots so slot one is the faster slot there are different types of slots and there's more information on that I just I don't want to get too technical with you but basically that's where your memory card goes and I always use slot one in general but because there's two there you can have one as the primary and one is the backup so if you're a wedding shooter or something like that you could use this one for your raw photos and then you can have JPEG files go to this one as a backup for example it's a really good feature especially if you lose a memory card or it fails for some reason this is a great feature to have - like that now it goes in this way it doesn't go in this way and you can see here there's a little symbol there to show you so I'm just gonna put that in there like that and that's it memory cards in the door automatically shuts nice feature automatically locks when you close it now on the bottom we have the tripod mount here so basically you just would put a tripod plate you would screw it on there and then it would lock you know it would support the camera if you want to put it on a tripod or something that's how that works not really much to that now this is where the battery goes and the a 7-3 has a new battery it takes two zseries battery and you can see on the door there and it'll give you like an indication of which way it goes but if you look down you can see there's little plugs at the and that's where it's gonna marry up to this part on the battery so here's the battery right here and you basically will just put that in like so it's got an arrow to tell you which way to go goes this way so you just put that in and it's keyed also you know it's notched it's got like a t-shape to it sorta so you can't put it in the wrong way you just put it in like that and it locks in place and then when you shut the door it doesn't automatically lock so you have to slide this thing over which kind of sucks it should automatically lock in my opinion but it doesn't but anyway you do that and now it's in there and locked and now you're ready to go I mean you do have to charge the battery when you first get the camera so you're going to need to plug this in to that spot I showed you over here and then hook it up with the plug charge the battery once the battery is charged you can then turn the camera on for the first time all right so I'm in full auto mode and this lab scene is too close for me to focus on right now but I can focus on the background and you can see if I'm just I'm just pressing the shutter halfway now and it's focusing but if I hold it down it's taking rapidfire shots so it's just firing away so that's how that works very basic now when you first turn the camera on for the first time however you are going to have to enter the time and date it's not a big deal it's very easy just going to select your area and get the time in there and stuff like that alright so we're in auto mode right now and what I wanted to show you was the function menu if you hit the function button here that'll bring up this quick menu on the bottom and because it's full auto mode you have very limited options but let me show you what you got right that stands for auto focus single let me just adjust my exposure here yeah I just want to make it so the screen looks a little bit better so if you click that you can just use your navigation toggle here or you can use the pad here either or to navigate around you can click that and now you're in your drive mode settings so right now it's set to continuous shooting mode and you can change that see how there's little arrows the left and right arrows so when you see those air that means there's more options so you've got hot medium-low high plus that's maximum speed and then just high speed so I'm just gonna put that back to medium and then I'm gonna go to single shooting but I wanted to also show you have self timer here and again notice the arrows you can change the self timer ten seconds five seconds two seconds and there's more stuff down here you got self timer continuous it'll take ten seconds it'll take three images and then you have all these bracket settings these are more advanced settings so I'm not going to go over them in this video but again you can find I have many videos on this that goes into more detail on that type of stuff let me just go back to the function menu and show you the focus mode so here is focus mode af-s so you have a couple different options here this is single-shot AF this is good for doing still moving subjects landscapes and things like that stuff that's not moving really if your portrait subject is moving this might not be the best option like if somebody's like but if there's somebody sitting still and you're taking a portrait that would be good if you have moving subjects you're gonna want to use AF C for continuous autofocus now AF a is automatic so it should sense if stuff is moving in your scene and automatically switch between AFC and AFS and it does work quite well I tend to use AF a a lot and then down here you have DMF and then you have MF so DMF I think stands for direct manual focus and it just gives you a little bit more control if you basically want to focus and then fine-tune it similar to manual focus but you're kind of using autofocus to get it there faster and manual focus is if you just want to turn the focus ring like so which is great sometimes for like macro or flowers where the camera is just not focusing on what you want you can switch it to manual focus and then go there so I'm just gonna leave it on AF a for now it's a good feature I would recommend using that and the focus area we can't change because we're in full auto mode but it is set to wide that's what this means on the left here looking at the screen and you can also see some other options remember how I told you if you hit the Display button you can change the way the screen looks so this Display button this top button so let me just show you how when you hit it it changes see that so you might wonder like why did everything go away I don't see anything that's because we accidentally hit the Display button so just hit that again and it'll bring up the histogram you press it again it'll bring up the leveler so that'll tell you if the cameras level or not check that out isn't that cool it's a great feature and it also has touch to focus it's turned off by default though I got to show you where to turn that on I just did a video on touch to focus so check that out on my channel and it'll explain the touch to focus but default it is off so it's not gonna come up like it just did where you saw me do that if you haven't turned it on yet just so you know I'm gonna hit the Display button again and this is a great option it shows you everything that's going on on the camera it'll tell you what mode you're in you're in it's intelligent Auto right now it says and it'll give you the histogram it will give you the leveler it'll tell you what your aperture is set to it'll tell you your quality raw versus JPEG and so forth but I tend to use this one the most I like this mode because it gives you most of the information but not too much so you can still see the screen and stuff let me show you another mode quick p mode p mode is pretty much full auto except it gives you more options more you can change more options when in p mode as opposed to auto mode let me show you what i mean you could see there's a lot more stuff on the screen already like if i put it back to full auto see how all that stuff goes away so when i put it in this mode now that means i can basically change all this stuff so let me go back into the function menu and now show you how many more options there are so now you can change your focus area so if you select that on the left here you have all different focus areas you have wide which will basically just use the whole sensor and the camera will decide automatically what to focus on and it's very smart it pretty much always picks the right thing for the most part but if it doesn't not a big deal you can also set the zone focus and you can change the way that that works you could see whoops let me go back to function back to that back to zone if you use the toggle the thumb toggle you can move it around say so if your subject is on one quadrant of the screen for example zone focus is pretty pretty good it narrows the focus down a little bit for you and I use that feature quite a bit this one here is Center focus so it'll just be in the center of the screen see that so that Center that's again a great feature if you just want the focus to be in that one spot it makes it much easier in certain scenarios like flowers or things like that insects works very good for stuff like that or you want to focus on just somebody that I or whatever and of course the camera has a iaf as well I have another video on IAF that will show you how to use that feature in more detail so let me go back in here now you have exposure cop that but that right there is the same as this dial on the top then you have ISO settings if you go into ISO that's the camera sensor sensitivity auto it's a great place to start but if you want to lock it down to a specific ISO you can go in here and you can do that so you can leave it at ISO 100 for example or whatever and now auto notice how there's an arrow there if you go to the right you can set it up so your you can have your minimum and maximum ISO s so you can raise this maximum up if you want all the way up to let's see how high echoes eighty thousand one hundred and two one hundred and twenty eight hundred and sixty two hundred and four two hundred and four thousand eight hundred is as high as it goes so obviously that's gonna be a little bit noisy for sure so usually somewhere around here would be good I'd probably leave it right here for now and that's pretty good so let me go back into the function menu now here you got metering mode metering mode basically controls how the camera exposes a scene and multi metering mode is pretty much what's used when you're in full auto mode by default and it will just average the entire frame and it'll try to come up with the best-case exposure for you but if you're shooting something that's really bright you might want to change your metering mode or if something in the scene is really bright like if there's a light bulb in the scene but you don't want the camera to expose for that you can change your metering mode to something like center or even spot and then you also have more metering modes you have the entire screen average and then you have highlight metering mode highlight metering mode is particularly awesome when there's something in the scene that's really bright that is except affecting your exposure and you you want it to expose for that so it'll expose for the highlights like a taking pictures of really break clouds or something that that's a really good feature or water that's like you know got some white froth in it but that's what the metering modes are and in general the multi meter emote is it is a good choice now if you scroll down you have prioritize recording media you can change which slot you're recording to and and which goes where this is your creative mode and standard is the default but you can change this you have all different options vivid which will give you much more vivid colors more saturated and stuff and then you could actually go in and manipulate these things and create custom ones and there's a whole bunch of options here you got neutral standard so play with these things take some sample photos and play with these different options and you'll be amazed at what you can do black and white sepia all sorts of stuff here so standard is the default and again it works really good it's gonna give you a fairly natural look for the most part so I would recommend leaving it there for for the time being and then you have white balance white balance is how your camera decides what colors are what like if you want the you know blue to be the correct blue you know order white balance is what determines that it'll it'll figure out how the colors are supposed to be because lighting changes you know sometimes the light is really cold sometimes the light is really warm and white balance is what controls that now you can dial it in if you click the white balance auto white balance does a really good job most of the time but if you're outside in the Sun you could lock it into daylight mode and then you know that the camera is not going to accidentally you know fluctuate like if you're taking shots throughout the day it'll be consistent it'll they'll all be consistent at one specific white balance and that's what that means and you can change it you got shade cloudy got incandescent lights those are like the yellow lights inside and then you got fluorescent lights different kinds of fluorescent lights and if you keep scrolling down you got underwater and then you have temperature here temperature is cool because you can actually go to the right and dial it in to a specific Kelvin and this is great if you're in a studio environment and you have lights that are a certain temperature for example I'm in the lab right now and these lights that I'm using to light light up the scene are 3200 degrees so I have this set for that so when I was taking lab test photos I knew that the white balance was set perfectly Auto doesn't do as good of a job as nailing it down perfect sometimes so that's what that feature is for the Kelvin and then you have custom white balance custom white balance is great for using a gray card a little bit more advanced but that will give you super accurate colors in all different scenarios and you can have multiple customs for it's great for wedding photography for inside churches receptions where the lighting is really weird and the camera just doesn't know what to do that's where you shoot a gray card and set to custom let me just go into the menu system now and show you a couple key things so for starters I'm gonna show you this because it's already on it but this is the favorites menu it's called my menu and you can put different items in here for quick access I added these items here so I have file format I have for taking photos and then I also have file format for taking video and then I have format for formatting the memory card so that format just plain format will delete the memory card and set it back to you know so there's nothing on there and then if you go to the right one more you could see how it says two of two there so this is one of two and you see that little arrow that's it that means this is two of two and this is how you add items and sort them and delete them delete a page delete all awesome feature than my menu settings that Sony added if you go left and right you can just basically scroll through all the pages you can also turn the dials to move it around and you could also use the thumb dial to move around in here so let me go back to page one so file format I'm just trying to get you guys shooting here so file format raw it is basically means you need to edit the photos yourself so if you don't want to do that if you're not using a program like Lightroom and you don't want to edit the photos yourself like in other words sharpen them adjust the colors and things like that add saturation you're gonna want to shoot in JPEG mode so again if you're new to the system and you just want to take photos and then share them you know on Facebook social media email them like right off the camera you just want to email them you want to shoot in JPEG mode and you can change the compression type for the raw and also JPEG quality you can change that I recommend using extra fine if you want the best possible quality but if you smaller file sizes you can bring it to fine or standard and you'll be able to hold a lot more images on your memory card and then you have JPEG size again if you don't need the full 24 megapixel resolution you might be doing something where you're going to take thousands of pictures and the resolution is not important if you're doing something like that you go in here and you can just make them lower resolution see that so you'll be able to get way more photos on your memory card depending on the situation so it's just a great feature to know about aspect ratio you can change that if you want 3 by 3 by 2 is the normal default which basically works out to like a 4 by 6 image and then you have aps-c super 35 millimeter and I'm just leaving that on auto for now yeah and you can put it in aps-c mode if you want what that means is it'll make the camera it'll turn it into a crop factor camera like the a 6500 so it uses less of the sensor that's really good for certain applications like video and things like that and if you need to go back and notice on the bottom there it says menu you just hit menu and it'll go back now a couple other things I wanted to show you this feat this menu system is insanely deep so I'm not going to go over all these features I want to show you I just want to get you up and running here so you got focus modes different priority settings and all sorts of stuff in here face priority center lock AF pre AF if you want to save some battery life you can turn that off I'm just gonna keep going over here to the right more Settings flash mode white balance focus magnifier now I'm on page to see that page to is movie good to see here it says movie 1 and there's 9 pages as you can see over here on the right it's like one of 9 so that means you can go to the right and go to all different pages but right here I wanted to show you the file format if you're recording video if you want to record 4k you got to have a fast memory card you got to have a memory card that's capable of doing that and I have recommended memory cards below the video if you're curious what cards you might need but if you go into file format here's where you can select the different qualities so you don't want to record 4k I would recommend setting it to this X AVC s HD option and that will give you really high quality 1080p video but 4k is obviously better it's a higher resolution but it gives you less record options and that what I mean by that as different types of recording modes so record setting you can see here it's at the 24 P which means 24 frames per second at 60 megabits per second so that's the amount of data that's going to be written to the card it also represents like the quality so the higher this number the higher the quality when it comes to the 60 versus 200 megabits per second so this would be a better option to 24 a hundred megabits but it's going to use way more memory card space and the file size is going to be much larger but the quality will be a little bit better and then you have 30 which is a different frame rate if you want to use 30 frames per second okay that's up to you so if I change that to this option now if I go to record setting look at all the options I got way more options and 120 will give you some great slow motion if you're looking to get some slow motion 120 will allow you to slow the video down quite a bit and it'll also capture high speed action a little bit better and so will 60 so you have 60 P and at 50 and then 60 P at 25 megabits per second and that will give you a little better frame rate capturing what if is a high speed subjects you're trying to capture or something like that 60 P might be a better way to go for you depending on what you're doing I tend to use 24 P that's what movies are basically you shot at for the most part and it's a very cinematography oriented frame rate and like I said that's what pretty much movies and TV are shot at these days on YouTube and stuff a lot of people are shooting at 30 P and a lot of people now are shooting at 60 P which gives you that like super smooth footage when you're watching like any kind of moving stuff so that higher frame rate doesn't make stuff look smoother when it's action oriented and it also allows you to slow the footage down a little bit if you're if you're gonna broadcast at 30 P you can slow the footage down you know one time so you can see there I would have it set if I was using this I would recommend 24 at 50 HD like that if I was shooting 4k I would set it to 24 P at a hundred megabits but again you want to save a memory card space you can go to 60 get a little bit less quality but the end of the day they both look great now let me just show you where to turn on the touch focus and I'm just going to show you this menu system as I go all sorts of AF auto focus tracking features and drive speed features while you're recording video that's what that stuff is and then you have all these other options you know marker settings I mean it there's so many options on this camera it's unbelievable steady shock settings that's like the stabilization and how the camera works for that zoom settings you can change the zoom settings it's at the optical zoom right now so there's no zoom but you can actually change that and you can turn clear image zoom on and get more zoom out of your lens depending on what lens you're using even with the prime lens you can turn your zoom on and you can actually zoom with a button and get some zoom even if you're using a prime lens but I'm just gonna leave it the optical zoom for now now if I keep scrolling over here we wanted to show you a couple other things here's where your custom keys are remember I told you about the C buttons this is where you can change those and audio signals you can turn that off if you don't want the camera to beep Wi-Fi settings all sorts of stuff like that and playback settings this is like when you're viewing photos if you take a picture and you want to view them that's what this play button is right here my thumb you hit that and it'll bring you into the play and that's the photo I took before and here's some of Laila from Taekwondo so you can scroll through there like that so that's how you view your photos and you can also zoom in on them through hit this AF this button here the magnifying glass it'll zoom in on the images and then you can navigate around the photo during playback make sure your sharpness is good that's how you do that let me just go back to the menu though all right now if we keep going to the right I wanted to show you the tool box now brightness monitor brightness I have it set to sunny weather right now and that makes the monitor way brighter I put it to manual you can see the the monitor went way less bright and that's good because it'll save battery life but I wanted to show you that feature because when you're outside the monitor brightness is sometimes not enough and that's where you can make it super bright so it's much easier to see and then you have your volume settings here you can change that if to lower the volume when you're viewing movies on playback for example now if I go to the right here you can change your display quality and things like that how quick the camera turns off that's what power start power say this but touch operation this is what I wanted to show you that's where you turn that on touch operation I did a whole video on that so just check out that video for way more details but just to get you up and running I wanted to show you that quick I'm gonna link below I'll put a link to the help guide the Sony help guide and that will really help you out if you just search whatever you're looking for whatever feature you're looking for if you go to the help guide it'll show you and explain to you with pictures and everything it's great I'll actually screencap some of it so you can see what it looks like as I'm talking here I'll show you what the help guide looks like and it works really well it answers a lot of questions I use it a lot of times before I do these videos just to clarify some things that I might not be a hundred percent sure on what term to say or whatever so it's it's great for that now one actually one last thing I want to show you is how this camera you can mount other lenses so I have a meta bones adapter and I have this Canon 24 to 105 lens so all you got to do is line up that dot see there's the white dot to the white dot like so and now I'm using a canon lens on a sony camera and they make all sorts of different lens adapters so I just wanted to make you aware that the camera is also capable of doing that alright guys just wanted to show you that really quick I'll put the zeiss batis lens back on this lens is amazing by the way still working on this review but it should be coming out shortly that is it for this crash course on how to get going for if you're a beginner with the sony a7 3 so please ask questions below if you got them I really hope you got something out of it my beginner videos seem to be doing pretty well so that's why I decided to do one for this camera and you guys seem to like those videos so I will catch up with you guys later please give me a thumbs up I really appreciate it if you do that and please be sure to subscribe and again let me know what you think if you need a video on more another feature that you want me to show or whatever I could make another video or I can direct you to a video I already made that can help you in that area for example have a great day guys I'll catch up with you next time take care
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Channel: Jason Hermann
Views: 762,340
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Keywords: sony a7iii, sony a7 iii, how-to, guide, beginner, sony, a7iii, a7m3, help, Beginners Guide, how to setup sony a7iii, sony a7iii tutorial, sony a73, a7 iii, sony a7iii setup, sony a7iii video settings, best settings for sony a7iii, a7iii setup, sony a7siii, sony a7iii menu settings, sony a7iii photo settings, sony a7iii photography, sony a7iii best settings, sony a7iii menu tutorial, sony a7iii settings, sony a73 photography settings, sony a7iii photography tutorials
Id: 5L8j4FkxDTw
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 33min 32sec (2012 seconds)
Published: Mon Dec 17 2018
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