SSelecting the AF PointN

Shooting Tips

When shooting a portrait up close, use One-Shot AF and focus the eyes.

If you focus the eyes first, you can then recompose and the face will remain sharp.

If it is difficult to focus, select and use the center AF point.

The center AF point is the most sensitive among the nine AF points.

To make it easier to focus a moving subject, set the camera to automatic AF point selection and AI Servo AF (p.104).

The center AF point will first be used to focus the subject. During autofocusing, if the subject moves away from the center AF point, focus tracking continues as long as the subject is covered by another AF point.

AF-Assist Beam with the Built-in Flash

Under low-light conditions, when you press the shutter button halfway, the built-in flash may fire a brief burst of flashes. This illuminates the subject to enable easier autofocusing.

The AF-assist beam will not be fired from the built-in flash in the following shooting modes: <7>, <3>, <5>, and <C>.

The AF-assist beam cannot be emitted with AI Servo AF operation. The effective range of the AF-assist beam emitted by the built-in flash is approx. 4 meters/13.1 feet.

In Creative Zone modes, when you raise the built-in flash with the <I> button (p.111), the AF-assist beam will be emitted when necessary. Note that depending on the setting for [4: AF-assist beam firing] under [54: Custom Functions (C.Fn)], AF beam will not be emitted (p.302).

If you use an Extender (sold separately) and the f/number becomes higher than f/5.6, AF shooting will not be possible (except in [u+Tracking], [FlexiZone - Multi], and [FlexiZone - Single] during Live View shooting). For details, refer to the Extender’s instruction manual.

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