•The following conditions are not compatible with Wide Shot shooting.
–Subject whose brightness is very different from that of its surroundings due to artificial light, sunlight, etc.
–Rivers, waves, waterfalls, or other subject with constantly changing patterns
–Sky, beach, or other subject with continuous patterns
–Camera too close to the main subject
–Moving subject
–Panning upwards on a skyscraper or some other very tall structure or object
•Any of the following can cause Wide Shot operation to stop part way through.
–Subject or camera movement
–Camera movement that is too fast or too slow
–Camera movement outside of the required route
–Camera movement in the wrong direction
•Shooting a Wide Shot image after
•Since a Wide Shot image is created by joining multiple images together, there may be some roughness at the point where two images are joined.
•Shooting under a flickering light source (such as fluorescent lighting) may result in uneven brightness and/or coloring in the final Wide Shot image.
•Shooting in dark surroundings may result in a blurred image or may make Wide Shot shooting impossible.
•Slowly move the camera at a constant speed in the same direction as the arrow that appears on the monitor screen.
•The exposure and white balance when shooting Wide Shot images are fixed at the levels measured when you
•An error message will appear if the camera is unable to successfully record a series of images.
•If you shoot a moving subject, the camera may not be able to compose the super- wide image properly.
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•With this BEST SHOT scene, the flash setting automatically becomes ? (Flash Off).
85 | Using BEST SHOT |
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