Canon PowerShot Sx200 Is User Manual

Camera User Guide  
ENGLISH  
Make sure you read this guide before using the camera.  
Store this guide safely so that you can use it in the future.  
Read This First  
Test Shots  
Take some initial test shots and play them back to make sure the images  
were recorded correctly. Please note that Canon Inc., its subsidiaries and  
affiliates, and its distributors are not liable for any consequential damages  
arising from any malfunction of a camera or accessory, including memory  
cards, that results in the failure of an image to be recorded or to be recorded  
in a way that is machine readable.  
Warning Against Copyright Infringement  
The images recorded with this camera are intended for personal use. Do not  
record images that infringe upon copyright laws without the prior permission  
of the copyright holder. Please be advised that in certain cases the copying  
of images from performances, exhibitions, or commercial properties by  
means of a camera or other device may contravene copyright or other legal  
rights even if the image was shot for personal use.  
Warranty Limitations  
For information on your camera's warranty, please refer to the Canon  
Warranty System Booklet supplied with your camera.  
For Canon Customer Support contacts, please see the Warranty System  
Booklet.  
LCD Monitor  
The LCD monitor is produced with extremely high-precision manufacturing  
techniques. More than 99.99% of the pixels operate to specification, but  
occasionally non-performing pixels may appear as bright or dark dots. This  
is not a malfunction and has no effect on the recorded image.  
Camera Body Temperature  
Please take care when operating the camera for an extended period as the  
camera body may become warm. This is not a malfunction.  
Memory Cards  
The various types of memory cards that can be used in this camera are  
collectively referred to as memory cards in this guide.  
3
 
What Do You Want to Do?  
Shoot  
Shoot, leaving it to the camera to make settings . . . . . . . . . . . . 24  
Just Taking Pictures (Easy mode) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57  
Shoot to match special conditions. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58 61  
Take good people shots  
I F V w P  
Portraits  
With nightscapes Kids and pets  
At the beach With snowscapes  
Take good landscapes  
J U  
,
Night Scene  
O
Foliage  
Landscape  
Sunsets  
Shoot various other scenes  
H t  
y
Z
Indoors  
Fireworks  
Aquarium  
Low light  
Focus on faces . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24, 67, 84, 87  
Shoot in places where I cannot use the flash (turn off the flash) . . 62  
Shoot pictures with me in them too (self-timer). . . . . . . . . . . 66, 67  
Insert the date and time into my shots . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65  
Take close-up pictures of subjects (macro shooting) . . . . . . . . . 71  
Take sepia toned or black and white pictures. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78  
Change the size of picture I want to take (recording pixels) . . . . 72  
Take pictures continuously . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 77  
Shoot without the effects of camera shake (image stabilization) . . 144  
Shoot without the effects of camera shake even in low light  
conditions (High ISO Auto) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61, 74  
Maintain the focus on moving subjects (Servo AF). . . . . . . . . . . 86  
Make dark subjects appear brighter (i-Contrast). . . . . . . . . . . . . 95  
4
 
What Do You Want to Do?  
View  
Look at my pictures. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27  
Automatically play back pictures (slideshow) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 112  
Look at my pictures on a TV . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 116  
Quickly search pictures. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 110, 111  
Erase pictures . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28, 118  
Protect pictures from accidental erasure. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 121  
Shoot/View Movies  
Shoot movies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31  
E
View movies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33  
Print  
Easily print pictures. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29  
2
Save  
Save images to a computer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34  
Other  
Turn off sounds . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49  
Use the camera abroad. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15, 139  
5
Table of Contents  
Chapters 1 – 3 explain the basic operations and frequently used functions of  
this camera. Chapters 4 onward explain the advanced functions, letting you  
learn more as you read each chapter.  
Returning the Camera to Default  
Low Level  
Memory Card Formatting .......... 52  
Power Saving Function  
(Auto Power Down) ................... 53  
Inserting the Battery and  
Memory Card .............................16  
3 Shooting in Special  
Used Functions................... 55  
9 Viewing or Erasing  
in Easy mode............................. 57  
Shooting in Various  
Conditions ................................. 58  
Zooming in More Closely on Subjects  
(Digital Zoom)............................ 63  
Transferring Images to a  
Computer ...................................34  
4 Selecting Settings Yourself  
Information Displayed on the  
Screen........................................44  
e Shooting Close-ups  
(Macro/Super Macro) ................ 71  
m FUNC. Menu – Basic  
Operations .................................47  
6
Table of Contents  
Changing the Compression Ratio  
(Image Quality) ......................... 72  
Brighter (i-Contrast)...................95  
Adjusting the Brightness  
(Exposure Compensation) ........ 76  
Setting the Flash Exposure  
Changing the Tone of an Image  
Compensation ...........................98  
(My Colors) ............................... 78  
Exposure Compensation  
Î Shooting Using the Two Second  
(Safety FE) ................................99  
Self-Timer ................................. 79  
L Shooting Stitch Assist  
Changing the Composition with the  
Focus Lock................................ 81  
0 Selecting the Person to  
Focus On (Face Select) ............ 87  
7 Using Playback and Other  
Switching the Focus Setting and  
Shoot......................................... 88  
Viewing Images  
Using the Manual Focus in  
in Filtered Playback .................111  
(Safety MF) ............................... 90  
Viewing Images on  
D Setting the Shutter Speed and  
Aperture Value.......................... 94  
7
Table of Contents  
; Organizing Images by Category  
(My Category) ..........................123  
Changing the Start-up Image or  
Sound...................................... 146  
? Adding Effects with the  
@ Making Dark Subjects  
Appear Brighter (i-Contrast).....129  
Printing from the Print List  
List of Messages that Appear  
on the Screen.......................... 154  
Selecting Images for  
Functions Available in Each  
Printing (DPOF) .......................133  
Shooting Mode ........................ 156  
8
Conventions Used in this Guide  
Icons are used in the text to represent the camera buttons and switches.  
Language that displays on the screen appears inside [ ] (square brackets).  
The directional buttons, control dial, and FUNC./SET button are  
represented by the following icons.  
(Up button)  
(Right button)  
(Left button)  
(Down button)  
(Control dial)  
: Troubleshooting tips.  
: Hints for getting more out of your camera.  
: Things you should be careful about.  
: Supplemental information.  
(p. xx): Reference pages. “xx” stands for page number.  
This chapter assumes all functions are at their default settings.  
9
   
Safety Precautions  
Before using the camera, please ensure that you read the safety precautions described  
below. Always ensure that the camera is operated correctly.  
The safety precautions noted on the following pages are intended to prevent injuries to  
yourself and other persons, or damage to the equipment.  
Be sure to also check the guides included with any separately sold accessories you use.  
Denotes the possibility of serious injury or death.  
Denotes the possibility of injury.  
Warning  
Caution  
Caution  
Denotes the possibility damage to the equipment.  
Warning  
Camera  
Do not trigger the flash in close proximity to human eyes.  
Exposure to the intense light produced by the flash could damage eyesight. In  
particular, remain at least one meter (39 inches) away from infants when using the flash.  
Store this equipment out of the reach of children and infants.  
Strap: Putting the strap around a child’s neck could result in asphyxiation.  
Memory card, day/date battery: Dangerous if accidentally swallowed. If this occurs,  
contact a doctor immediately.  
Do not attempt to disassemble or alter any part of the equipment that is not  
expressly described in this guide.  
To avoid the risk of injury, do not touch the interior of the camera if it has been  
dropped or otherwise damaged.  
Stop operating the camera immediately if it emits smoke, a strange smell, or  
otherwise behaves abnormally.  
Do not use organic solvents such as alcohol, benzine, or thinner to clean the  
equipment.  
Do not allow liquids or foreign objects to enter the camera.  
This could result in fire or electrical shock.  
If liquid or foreign objects come into contact with the camera interior, immediately turn  
the camera power off and remove the battery.  
Use only recommended power sources.  
Using other power sources could result in fire or electrical shock.  
10  
 
Safety Precautions  
Battery, Battery Charger  
Use only recommended batteries.  
Do not place the battery near or in direct flame.  
Do not let the battery come into contact with water (e.g. sea water) or other liquids.  
Do not attempt to disassemble, alter or apply heat to the battery.  
Avoid dropping or subjecting the battery to severe impacts.  
This may cause explosions or leaks, resulting in fire, injury and damage to the  
surroundings. In the event that a battery leaks and the eyes, mouth, skin or clothing  
contacts these substances, immediately flush with water and seek medical assistance.  
If the battery charger becomes wet, unplug it from the outlet and consult your camera  
distributor or the closest Canon Customer Support Help Desk.  
Use only the specified battery charger to charge the battery.  
Do not cut, damage, alter or place heavy items on the power cord.  
Unplug the power cord periodically and wipe away any dust and dirt that has  
collected on the plug, the exterior of the power outlet, and the surrounding area.  
Do not handle the power cord with wet hands.  
This could result in fire or electrical shock.  
Other Warnings  
Do not play the supplied CD-ROM(s) in any CD player that does not support  
data CD-ROMs.  
Playing the CD-ROM(s) in an audio CD player (music player) could damage the  
speakers. It is also possible to suffer hearing loss from listening with headphones to  
the loud sounds of a CD-ROM played on a music CD player.  
Caution  
Be careful not to bang the camera or subject it to strong impacts or shocks  
when hanging it by the strap.  
Be careful not to bump or push strongly on the lens.  
This could damage the camera or lead to injury.  
Avoid using, placing or storing the camera in the following places.  
- Places subject to strong sunlight.  
- Places subject to temperatures above 40 °C (104 °F).  
- Humid or dusty areas.  
These could cause leakage, overheating or an explosion of the battery, resulting in  
electrical shock, fire, burns or other injuries. High temperatures may also cause  
deformation of the casing.  
Do not allow dirt or metal objects (such as pins or keys) to contact the charger  
terminals or plug.  
This could result in fire, electrical shock or other damage.  
11  
Safety Precautions  
Playing back for a long time may cause feelings of discomfort.  
Caution  
Do not aim the camera at bright light sources (the sun, etc.).  
Doing so may cause malfunctions or damage the image sensor.  
When using the camera on a beach or at a windy location, be careful not to  
allow dust or sand to enter the camera.  
Do not use the flash with dirt, dust or other items stuck to the surface, or if it is  
covered by your fingers or clothing.  
This may cause the camera to malfunction.  
Unplug the battery charger from the power outlet after recharging is complete,  
or when you are not using it.  
Do not place anything, such as cloth on top of the battery charger while it is  
charging.  
Leaving the unit plugged in for a long period of time may cause it to overheat and  
distort, resulting in fire.  
Remove and store the battery when you are not using the camera.  
If the battery is left inside the camera, damage caused by leakage may occur.  
Before you discard batteries, cover the terminals with tape or other insulators.  
Contacting other metal materials in waste containers may lead to fire or explosions.  
Do not place the battery near pets.  
Pets biting the battery could cause leakage, overheating or explosion, resulting in fire  
or other injuries.  
Do not sit in a chair with the camera in your pocket.  
Doing so may cause malfunctions or damage the LCD monitor.  
When putting the camera in your bag, ensure that hard objects do not come into  
contact with the LCD monitor.  
Do not attach accessories to the strap.  
Doing so may cause malfunctions or damage the LCD monitor.  
12  
1
Getting Started  
This chapter explains preparations before shooting, how to shoot in  
A mode, and then how to view, erase and print the images you  
take. The latter part of this chapter explains how to shoot and view  
movies and transfer images to a computer.  
Attaching the Strap/Holding the Camera  
Attach the included strap and place it around your wrist to avoid dropping  
the camera during use.  
Keep your arms tight against your body while holding the camera firmly by  
the sides. Be sure that your fingers do not block the flash.  
Strap  
13  
       
Charging the Battery  
Use the included charger to charge the battery.  
Remove the cover.  
Insert the battery.  
Align the S marks on the battery and  
charger, then insert the battery by sliding it  
in  
and down  
.
Charge the battery.  
For CB-2LX: Flip out the plug  
the charger into a power outlet  
and plug  
.
For CB-2LXE: Plug the power cord into  
the charger, then plug the other end into a  
power outlet.  
CB-2LX  
X The charge lamp lights red and charging  
starts.  
The charge lamp will light green when  
charging has finished. Charging takes  
approx. 2 hours and 5 minutes.  
CB-2LXE  
Remove the battery.  
Unplug the battery charger from the power  
outlet, then remove the battery by sliding it  
in  
and up  
.
To protect the battery and prolong its life, do not charge it for longer than  
24 hours continuously.  
14  
 
Charging the Battery  
Approximate Number of Shots That Can Be Taken  
Number of shots  
280  
5
Playback Time (Hours)  
The number of shots that can be taken is based on the Camera & Imaging Products  
Association (CIPA) measurement standard.  
Under some shooting conditions, fewer shots can be taken.  
Battery Charge Indicator  
An icon or message will appear on the screen indicating the battery’s charge state.  
Display  
Summary  
Good.  
Slightly depleted, but sufficient.  
(Blinking red) Nearly depleted.  
“Change the battery pack.”  
Depleted. Recharge the battery.  
Using the battery and charger effectively  
Charge the battery on the day, or the day before, it will be used.  
Charged batteries continue to discharge naturally even if they are not used.  
Attach the cover to a charged battery  
so that the S mark is visible.  
How to store the battery for long periods.  
Deplete and remove the battery from the camera. Attach the terminal cover and  
store the battery. Storing a battery for long periods of time (about a year) without  
depleting it may shorten its life span or affect its performance.  
The battery charger can also be used when abroad.  
The charger can be used in regions that have 100 – 240 V (50/60 Hz) AC  
power. If the plug does not fit the outlet, use a commercially available plug  
adapter. Do not use devices, such as electrical transformers for foreign travel,  
because they will cause malfunctions.  
The battery may develop a bulge.  
This is a normal characteristic of the battery and does not indicate a problem.  
However, if the battery bulges to the point where it will no longer fit into the  
camera, please contact a Canon Customer Support Help Desk.  
If the battery is quickly depleted even after charging, it has reached the end of its  
life span.  
Purchase a new battery.  
15  
     
Inserting the Battery and Memory Card  
Insert the included battery and a memory card into the camera.  
Check the card’s write-protect tab.  
If the memory card has a write-protect tab,  
you will not be able to record images if the  
tab is in the locked position. Slide the tab  
up until you hear a click.  
Open the cover.  
Slide the cover  
, and open it  
.
Insert the battery.  
Insert the battery as shown until it locks  
into place with a click.  
Be sure to insert the battery in the correct  
direction or it will not properly lock into  
place.  
Terminals  
Insert the memory card.  
Insert the memory card as shown until it  
locks into place with a click.  
Be sure the memory card is oriented  
correctly. Inserting the memory card in the  
wrong direction could damage the  
camera.  
16  
   
Inserting the Battery and Memory Card  
Close the cover.  
Close the cover  
, and slide it  
until it  
locks into place with a click.  
Removing the Battery and Memory Card  
Remove the battery.  
Open the cover and press the battery lock  
in the direction of the arrow.  
X The battery will pop up.  
Remove the memory card.  
Push the memory card in until you hear a  
click, then slowly release it.  
X The memory card will pop up.  
17  
 
Inserting the Battery and Memory Card  
Approximate Number of Shots per Memory Card  
Memory Card  
2 GB  
626  
8 GB  
2505  
Number of shots  
Values are based on the default settings.  
The number of shots that can be taken will vary depending on camera settings, the  
subject and the memory card used.  
Can you check the number of shots that can be taken?  
You can check the number of shots that can be taken when the camera is in a  
Shooting Mode (p. 24).  
Number of shots that can be taken  
Compatible Memory Cards  
SD memory cards  
SDHC memory cards  
MultiMediaCards  
MMCplus memory cards  
HC MMCplus memory cards  
What is the write-protect tab?  
SD and SDHC memory cards have a write-protect tab. If this tab is in the locked  
position, [Card locked!] will appear on the screen and you will not be able to take  
or erase images.  
18  
         
Setting the Date and Time  
The Date/Time settings screen will appear the first time the camera is turned  
on. Since the dates and times recorded into your images are based on these  
settings, be sure to set them.  
Turn on the camera.  
Press the power button.  
X The Date/Time screen will appear.  
Set the date and time.  
Press the qr buttons to select an option.  
Press the op buttons or turn the  dial  
to set a value.  
Make the setting.  
Press the m button.  
X Once the date and time have been set,  
the Date/Time screen will close.  
Pressing the power button will turn off the  
camera.  
Reappearing Date/Time screen  
Set the correct date and time. If you have not set the date and time, the Date/  
Time screen will appear each time you turn on the camera.  
Daylight saving time settings  
If you select  
in Step 2 and press the op buttons or turn the  dial and  
select , you will set the time to daylight savings (1 hour ahead).  
19  
     
Setting the Date and Time  
Changing the Date and Time  
You can change the current date and time settings.  
Display the menus.  
Press the n button.  
Select [Date/Time] in the 3 tab.  
Press the qr buttons to select the 3 tab.  
Press the op buttons or turn the  dial  
to select [Date/Time], then press the m  
button.  
Change the date and time.  
Follow Steps 2 and 3 on p. 19 to adjust  
the setting.  
To close the menus, press the n  
button.  
Date/Time battery  
The camera has a built-in date/time battery (backup battery) that allows the  
date/time settings to be retained about three weeks after the battery pack has  
been removed.  
By inserting a charged battery or connecting an AC adapter kit (sold separately,  
p. 40) the date/time battery can be charged in about 4 hours even if the camera  
is not turned on.  
If the date/time battery is depleted, the Date/Time menu will appear when you  
turn the camera on. Follow the steps on p. 19 to set the date and time.  
20  
   
Setting the Display Language  
You can change the language displayed in the LCD monitor menus and  
messages.  
Set the playback mode.  
Press the 1 button.  
Display the settings screen.  
Press and hold the m button  
, then  
immediately press the n button  
.
Set the display language.  
Press the opqr buttons or turn the   
dial to select a language, then press the  
m button.  
X Once the display language has been set,  
the language menu will close.  
What if the clock appears when the m button is pressed?  
The clock will display if too much time passes between pressing the m button  
and the n button in Step 2. If the clock appears, press the m button to  
remove the clock and repeat Step 2.  
You can also change the display language by pressing the n button,  
selecting the 3 tab, and selecting the [Language] menu item.  
21  
   
Formatting Memory Cards  
Before you use a new memory card or one that has been used in other  
devices, you should format the card with this camera. Formatting (initializing)  
a memory card erases all data on the memory card. As you cannot retrieve  
the erased data, exercise adequate caution before formatting the memory  
card.  
Display the menu.  
Press the n button.  
Select [Format].  
Press the qr buttons to select the 3  
tab.  
Press the op buttons or turn the  dial  
to select [Format], then press the m  
button.  
Format the memory card.  
Press the qr buttons or turn the  dial  
to select [OK], then press the m button.  
X The memory card will be formatted.  
X When formatting has finished, the menu  
screen will reappear.  
Formatting or erasing data on a memory card merely changes the file  
management information on the card and does not ensure its contents  
are completely erased. Be careful when transferring or disposing of a  
memory card. When disposing of a memory card, take precautions such  
as physically destroying the card to prevent personal information leaks.  
The total capacity of the memory card displayed in the formatting screen  
may be less than indicated on the memory card.  
22  
 
Pressing the Shutter Button  
The shutter button has two stops. To take images that are in focus, be sure  
to first press the shutter button lightly (halfway) to focus, then take the shot.  
Press halfway (lightly to the first  
stop).  
X The camera focuses and automatically  
selects the necessary settings for  
shooting, such as the brightness.  
X When the camera focuses, it will beep  
twice and the indicator will light green.  
Press fully (to the second stop).  
X The camera plays the shutter sound and  
takes the shot.  
Since the shot is being taken while the  
shutter sound plays, be careful not to  
move the camera.  
Does the length of the shutter sound change?  
Since the time required to shoot differs according to the scene you want to take,  
the length of the shutter sound may change.  
If the camera or subject moves while the shutter sound is playing, the recorded  
image may be blurry.  
If you just press the shutter button fully without pausing halfway, the  
image may not be in focus.  
23  
   
A Taking Pictures  
Since the camera can determine the subject and shooting conditions, you  
can let it automatically select the best settings for the scene and just shoot.  
The camera can also detect and focus on faces, setting the color and  
brightness to optimal levels.  
Turn on the camera.  
Press the power button.  
X The start-up sound will play, and the start-  
up screen will appear.  
Pressing the power button again will turn  
the camera off.  
Select the A mode.  
Set the mode dial to A.  
When you point the camera toward the  
subject, the camera will make a slight  
noise as it determines the scene.  
X The camera focuses on the subject it  
judges to be the main subject, and  
displays the icon for the determined scene  
in the upper right of the screen.  
X When faces are detected, a white frame  
appears on the face of the main subject,  
while gray frames appear on other  
detected faces.  
X Even if the detected faces move, the  
camera will follow the faces within a  
certain range.  
Compose the shot.  
Moving the zoom lever toward i will  
zoom in on your subject, making it appear  
larger. Moving the lever toward j will  
zoom out from your subject, making it  
appear smaller.  
24  
       
A Taking Pictures  
Focus.  
Press the shutter button halfway to focus.  
X When the camera focuses, it will beep  
twice and the indicator will light green  
(orange when the flash will fire).  
X Green AF frames appear where the  
subject is in focus.  
X Several AF frames will appear when the  
camera focuses on more than one point.  
Shoot.  
Press the shutter button fully.  
X The camera will play the shutter sound  
and shoot. The flash will automatically fire  
in low light conditions.  
AF Frames  
X The indicator will blink green while the  
image is recorded to the memory card.  
X The image will appear on the screen for  
about two seconds.  
You can take a second picture even while  
an image is displayed by pressing the  
shutter button.  
What if...  
The camera does not play any sounds?  
Pressing the l button while turning on the camera power will turn off all  
sounds except for warning sounds. To turn the sounds on, press the n  
button, select the 3 tab, and then select [Mute]. Use the qr buttons to select  
[Off].  
The image comes out dark even if the flash fired when shooting?  
The subject is too far away for the flash to reach. Shoot within the effective flash  
range of approximately 50 cm – 3.0 m (1.6 – 9.8 ft.) at maximum wide angle,  
and approximately 1.0 – 2.0 m (3.3 – 6.6 ft.) at maximum telephoto.  
The camera beeps once when the shutter button is pressed halfway?  
Your subject is too close. When the camera is at maximum wide angle, move  
about 2 cm (0.79 in.) or more away from your subject and shoot. Move about  
1 m (3.3 ft.) or more away when the camera is at maximum telephoto.  
25  
     
A Taking Pictures  
The lamp lights when the shutter button is pressed halfway?  
To reduce red-eye and to assist in focusing, the lamp may light when shooting in  
dark areas.  
The h icon blinks when you try to take an image?  
The flash is charging. You can shoot when recharging ends.  
The camera makes a slight noise when you tilt it?  
This is the sound of the lens moving. This is not a malfunction.  
Scene Icons  
The camera displays an icon for the scene it has determined and then  
automatically focuses and selects the optimum settings for subject  
brightness and color.  
Including Blue  
Background  
Bright  
Dark  
When  
Skies  
Sunsets  
Subject  
People  
Backlit  
Backlit  
Using  
Tripod  
*
Subjects Other Than  
People  
*
Landscapes  
Close Subjects  
Icon Background  
Color  
Gray  
Light Blue  
Orange  
Dark Blue  
* Displays when the camera is attached to a tripod.  
Under certain conditions, the icon that displays may not match the actual  
scene. Especially when there is an orange or blue colored background (a  
wall for example),  
or the “Blue Skies” icons may appear and it may  
not be possible to shoot with the appropriate color. If this happens, try  
shooting in the G mode (p. 70).  
26  
 
1 Viewing Images  
You can view your images on the screen.  
Select the playback mode.  
Press the 1 button.  
X The last image you took will appear.  
Select an image.  
Pressing the  
images in reverse order.  
q
button will cycle through the  
Pressing the r button will cycle through  
the images in the order they were taken.  
The images change more quickly if you  
keep the qr buttons pressed, but they  
will appear coarse.  
Turning the  dial counter-clockwise  
displays images in reverse order, while  
turning it clockwise displays images in the  
order they were taken.  
Pressing the 1 button while the lens is  
extended will cause the shooting screen  
to reappear.  
The lens will retract after approximately 1  
minute elapses. If you press the 1 button  
with the lens retracted, the power will turn  
off.  
27  
     
/ Erasing Images  
You can select and erase images one at a time. Please note that erased  
images cannot be recovered. Exercise adequate caution before erasing an  
image.  
Select the playback mode.  
Press the 1 button.  
X The last image you took will appear.  
Select an image to erase.  
Press the qr buttons or turn the  dial  
to display an image to erase.  
Erase the image.  
Press the p button.  
X [Erase?] appears.  
Press the qr buttons or turn the  dial  
to select [Erase], then press the m  
button.  
X The displayed image will be erased.  
To exit instead of erasing, press the qr  
buttons or turn the  dial to select  
[Cancel], then press the m button.  
28  
 
2 Printing Images  
You can easily print the images you have taken if you connect the camera to  
a PictBridge compliant printer (sold separately).  
Items to Prepare  
Camera and PictBridge compliant printer (sold separately)  
Interface cable supplied with the camera (p. 2)  
Turn off the camera and printer.  
Connect the camera to the printer.  
Open the cover, and insert the small end  
of the plug firmly into the camera terminal  
in the direction shown.  
Insert the cable’s larger plug into the  
printer. For connection details, refer to the  
user guide provided with the printer.  
Turn on the printer.  
Turn on the camera.  
Press the 1 button to turn on the camera.  
X The c button will light blue.  
Select an image to print.  
Press the qr buttons or turn the  dial  
to select an image.  
29  
             
2 Printing Images  
Print images.  
Press the c button.  
X Printing will start and the c button will  
blink blue.  
If you want to print additional images,  
repeat Steps 5 and 6 after printing has  
completed.  
After printing has completed, turn off the  
camera and printer, and unplug the  
interface cable.  
Refer to the Personal Printing Guide for details on printing.  
Canon-Brand PictBridge Compliant Printers (Sold Separately)  
By connecting your camera to one of the Canon-brand PictBridge compliant  
printers below, you can print your images without having to use a computer.  
Compact Photo Printers  
(SELPHY Series)  
Inkjet Printers  
For more information, visit your nearest Canon retailer.  
30  
 
E Shooting Movies  
The camera can automatically select all settings so that you can shoot  
movies just by pressing the shutter button. If you continue shooting for a long  
time, the camera may become warm. This is not a malfunction.  
Set the mode dial to E.  
Shooting Time  
Select the E mode.  
Press the m button, then use the op  
buttons or turn the  dial to select E,  
then press the m button again.  
Press the op button or turn  dial to  
select E, then press the m button.  
Compose the shot.  
Moving the zoom lever toward i will  
zoom in on your subject, making it appear  
larger. Moving the lever toward j will  
zoom out from your subject, making it  
appear smaller.  
Focus.  
Press the shutter button halfway to focus.  
X When the camera focuses, it will beep  
twice and the indicator will light green.  
31  
   
E Shooting Movies  
Shoot.  
Press the shutter button fully.  
X The camera will start shooting the movie,  
and [ Rec] and the elapsed time will  
appear on the screen.  
Once shooting begins, take your finger off  
the shutter button.  
Elapsed Time  
If you change the composition of your shot  
during shooting, the focus will stay the  
same, but the brightness and tone will  
automatically adjust.  
Do not touch the microphone while  
shooting.  
Do not press any buttons other than the  
shutter button. Otherwise, the sound the  
buttons make will be recorded in the  
movie.  
Microphone  
Stop shooting.  
Press the shutter button fully again.  
X The camera will beep once and stop  
shooting the movie.  
X The indicator will blink green, and the  
movie will record to the memory card.  
X Shooting will automatically stop when the  
memory card fills.  
Estimated Shooting Times  
Memory Card  
Shooting Time  
2 GB  
10 min. 53 sec.  
8 GB  
43 min. 32 sec.  
Shooting times are based on default settings.  
Shooting time can be checked on the screen in Step 2.  
Max. clip length is approx. 29 minutes and 59 seconds.  
Recording also stops when the file size reaches 4 GB.  
32  
   
1 Viewing Movies  
You can view your movies on the screen.  
Select the playback mode.  
Press the 1 button.  
X The last image you shot will appear.  
X
appears on movies.  
Select a movie.  
Press the qr buttons or turn the  dial  
to select a movie, then press the o  
button.  
X The movie control panel will appear on the  
screen.  
Play the movie.  
Press the qr buttons or turn the  dial  
to select  
X The movie will play.  
, then press the m button.  
You can pause/resume the movie by  
pressing the m button again.  
Press the op buttons to adjust the  
volume.  
X After the movie finishes,  
appears.  
When watching a movie on a computer, frames may drop, it may not  
play smoothly, and the audio may stop suddenly depending on the  
computer’s capabilities.  
If you use the supplied software to copy the movie back onto the  
memory card, you can play back the movie smoothly. For enhanced  
playback you can also connect the camera to a TV.  
33  
   
Transferring Images to a Computer  
You can use the included software to transfer your camera images to a  
computer.  
System Requirements  
Even though these are recommended system requirements, not all  
computer functions can be guaranteed.  
Windows  
OS  
Windows Vista (including Service Pack 1)  
Windows XP Service Pack 2, Service Pack 3  
Computer model The above OS should be pre-installed on computers with built-in  
USB ports.  
CPU  
Viewing images Pentium 1.3 GHz or higher  
Viewing movies Core2 Duo 1.66 GHz or higher  
RAM  
Windows Vista: 1 GB or more  
Viewing images  
Windows XP: 512 MB or more  
Viewing movies 1 GB or more  
USB  
Interface  
Free Hard Disk  
Space  
ZoomBrowser EX: 200 MB or more  
Canon Utilities  
PhotoStitch: 40 MB or more  
Display  
1,024 x 768 pixels or higher  
Macintosh  
OS  
Mac OS X (v10.4 – v10.5)  
Computer model The above OS should be pre-installed on computers with built-in  
USB ports.  
CPU  
Viewing images PowerPC G4/G5 or Intel Processor  
Viewing movies Core Duo 1.66 GHz or higher  
Viewing images 512 MB or more  
Viewing movies 1 GB or more  
RAM  
Interface  
USB  
Free Hard Disk  
Space  
ImageBrowser: 300 MB or more  
Canon Utilities  
PhotoStitch: 50 MB or more  
Display  
1,024 x 768 pixels or higher  
34  
 
Transferring Images to a Computer  
Items to Prepare  
Camera and computer  
DIGITAL CAMERA Solution Disk supplied with the camera (p. 2)  
Interface cable supplied with the camera (p. 2)  
Preparations  
Windows XP and Mac OS X (v10.4) are used for these explanations.  
Install the software.  
Windows  
Place the DIGITAL CAMERA Solution  
Disk in the computer’s CD-ROM drive.  
Begin installation.  
Click [Easy Installation] and follow the  
onscreen instructions to proceed with the  
installation.  
When the install finishes, click  
[Restart] or [Finish].  
Remove the CD-ROM.  
Remove the CD-ROM when your desktop  
screen appears.  
Macintosh  
Place the CD-ROM in the computer's CD-  
ROM drive and double-click the  
icon.  
X The screen on the left displays.  
Click [Install], and follow the onscreen  
instructions to proceed with the  
installation.  
35  
   
Transferring Images to a Computer  
Connect the camera to the  
computer.  
Turn off the camera.  
Open the cover, and insert the cable's  
small plug into the camera terminal in the  
direction as shown.  
Insert the cable’s larger plug into the  
computer’s USB port. For connection  
details, refer to the user guide provided  
with the computer.  
Turn on the camera.  
Press the 1 button to turn on the camera.  
Open CameraWindow.  
Windows  
Select [Canon CameraWindow] and click  
[OK].  
X CameraWindow will appear.  
If CameraWindow does not appear, click  
the [Start] menu and select [All Programs]  
or [Programs], followed by [Canon  
Utilities]  
[CameraWindow]  
[CameraWindow]  
[CameraWindow].  
36  
Transferring Images to a Computer  
Macintosh  
X CameraWindow will appear when you  
establish a connection between the  
camera and computer.  
If CameraWindow does not appear, click  
the [CameraWindow] icon on the Dock  
(the bar which appears at the bottom of  
the desktop).  
Transfer Images  
Click [Transfer Untransferred Images].  
X All images not previously transferred will  
transfer to the computer.  
After the transfer finishes, turn off the  
camera and unplug the cable.  
For further operations, refer to the  
Software Starter Guide.  
Transferred images will be sorted by date and saved in separate folders in  
the “My Pictures” folder for Windows or the “Pictures” folder for  
Macintosh.  
37  
Accessories  
Supplied with Camera  
AV Cable  
AVC-DC400  
*1  
Wrist Strap  
WS-DC9  
Interface Cable  
*1  
IFC-400PCU  
*1  
Battery Pack NB-5L  
(with Terminal Cover)  
DIGITAL CAMERA  
Solution Disk  
Battery Charger  
CB-2LX/CB-2LXE  
*1  
AC Adapter Kit ACK-DC30  
DC Coupler  
DR-30  
Power Cord  
Compact Power Adapter  
CA-DC10  
*1 Also available for purchase separately.  
*2 See the user guide supplied with the printer for more information on the printer and  
interface cables.  
38  
 
Accessories  
HDMI Cable HTC-100  
High-Definition TV  
Video IN Terminal  
Audio IN Terminal  
TV/Video  
Memory Card  
*2  
Inkjet Printers  
Card Reader  
*2  
Compact Photo Printers  
(SELPHY series)  
High-Power Flash  
HF-DC1  
Windows/  
Macintosh  
Use of genuine Canon accessories is recommended.  
This product is designed to achieve excellent performance when used with genuine  
Canon accessories. Canon shall not be liable for any damage to this product and/or  
accidents such as fire, etc., caused by the malfunction of non-genuine Canon  
accessories (e.g., a leakage and/or explosion of a battery pack). Please note that this  
warranty does not apply to repairs arising out of the malfunction of non-genuine Canon  
accessories, although you may request such repairs on a chargeable basis.  
39  
Separately Sold Accessories  
The following camera accessories are sold separately.  
Some accessories are not sold in some regions, or may no longer be  
available.  
Power Supplies  
AC Adapter Kit ACK-DC30  
This kit lets you power the camera using household power. Recommended for  
powering the camera for an extended period of time or when connecting to a  
computer. Cannot be used to charge the battery inside the camera.  
Battery Charger CB-2LX/CB-2LXE  
An adapter for charging Battery Pack NB-5L.  
Battery Pack NB-5L  
Rechargeable lithium-ion battery.  
Other Accessories  
HDMI Cable HTC-100  
Use this cable to connect the camera to the HDMI™ terminal on a high-definition  
TV set.  
High-Power Flash HF-DC1  
This attachable supplementary flash can illuminate subjects that are too distant  
for the light from the built-in flash to reach.  
40  
         
2
Learning More  
This chapter explains the parts of the camera and what displays on  
the screen, as well as the basic operating instructions.  
41  
 
Components Guide  
Lamp (Self-Timer Lamp (p. 67) /  
AF Assist Beam (p. 143) / Red-Eye  
Reduction Lamp (p. 142))  
Microphone (p. 32)  
Shutter Button (p. 23)  
Mode Dial  
Power Button  
Lens  
Speaker  
Zoom Lever  
Tripod Socket  
Shooting: i (Telephoto) / j (Wide  
Angle) (p. 24)  
Memory Card / Battery Cover (p. 16)  
Strap Mount (p. 13)  
Playback: k (Magnify) / g (Index)  
Mode Dial  
Use the mode dial to change the shooting mode.  
P, Tv, Av, M Mode  
You can make settings such as the shutter  
speed and aperture value in order to take the  
picture you want (pp. 70, 92, 93, 94).  
Movie Mode  
For shooting movies  
Auto Mode  
You can leave it to the  
camera to select settings  
Easy Mode  
You can shoot just by  
pressing the shutter button  
Special Scene Mode  
The camera can automatically  
select all settings appropriate for  
the conditions so that you can take  
images just by pressing the shutter  
button (p. 58).  
42  
             
Components Guide  
Screen (LCD Monitor) (p. 44)  
Indicator (p. 46)  
b (Exposure) (p. 76) / o Button  
e (Macro) (p. 71) / f (Manual Focus)  
(p. 89) / q Button  
c (Direct Print) Button (pp. 29, 145)  
1 (Playback) Button (pp. 27, 109)  
HDMI OUT Mini Terminal (p. 117)  
A/V OUT (Audio/Video Output)  
DIGITAL Terminal  
Terminal Cover  
n (Menu) Button (p. 48)  
l (Display) Button (pp. 44, 45)  
Control Dial (p. 43)  
m FUNC./SET (Function/Set) Button  
h (Flash) (pp. 62, 70) / r Button  
a (Single Image Erase) (p. 28) / Q  
(Self-Timer) (pp. 66, 67) / p Button  
Control Dial  
Turning the control dial allows you to perform  
operations such as selecting items or switching  
images.  
1 Button  
When the lens is extended, you can switch between the Shooting and  
Playback modes. When the lens is retracted, you can use this button to turn  
the camera on and off in Playback mode.  
Lens is extended  
Lens is retracted  
Shooting  
mode  
Playback  
mode  
Power off  
1
1
43  
     
Information Displayed on the Screen  
Shooting (Information Display)  
Battery Charge Indicator  
Still Images: Recordable  
Flash Exposure  
Compensation (p. 98),  
Flash Output (p. 98)  
Time Zone (p. 139)  
Image Stabilizer (p. 144)  
Date Taken/Recorded  
ISO Speed (p. 74)  
Disp. Overlay (p. 144)  
AE Lock (pp. 90, 105),  
FE Lock (p. 91)  
Shutter Speed  
Camera Orientation*  
Drive Mode (p. 77)  
My Colors (p. 78)  
White Balance (p. 75)  
i-Contrast (p. 95)  
Camera Shake Warning  
Metering Modes (p. 88)  
Compression (Image  
Quality) (p. 72)  
Movies: Remaining Time/  
Elapsed Time (p. 32)  
Self-Timer (pp. 66, 67, 80)  
AF Frame (p. 25), Spot  
AE Point Frame (p. 88)  
Digital ZoomMagnification  
Macro (p. 71),  
Super Macro (p. 71),  
Manual Focus (p. 89)  
Shooting Mode  
Recording Pixels (p. 72)  
Aperture Value  
Flash Mode (pp. 62, 70)  
Red-Eye Correction  
Exposure Compensation  
*
: Standard,  
: Held vertically  
When shooting, the camera detects if it is held vertically or horizontally, and  
adjusts settings accordingly for the best shot. It also detects orientation during  
playback, so you can hold the camera in either orientation and it will  
automatically rotate images for correct viewing.  
This function may not operate correctly when the camera is pointed straight up or down.  
Switching the Display  
You can change the display using the l button.  
No Information Display  
Information Display  
44  
         
Information Displayed on the Screen  
Playback (Detailed Information Display)  
Print List (p. 131)  
My Category (p. 123)  
Shooting Mode  
Shutter Speed  
Exposure Compensation  
Battery Charge Indicator  
Metering Modes (p. 88)  
Folder Number – File  
Macro (p. 71), Super  
Macro (p. 71), Manual  
File Size (pp. 72, 104)  
Still Images: Recording  
Pixels (p. 72)  
Displayed image  
White Balance (p. 75)  
Histogram (p. 46)  
Image Editing (pp. 125 –  
Compression (Image  
Quality) (p. 72),  
number / Total number of  
images  
Movies: Movie Length  
Protect (p. 121)  
My Colors (p. 78)  
Red-Eye Correction  
ISO Speed (p. 74)  
Aperture Value, Image  
Quality (Movies) (p. 104)  
i-Contrast (p. 129)  
Flash (p. 70), Exposure  
Compensation (p. 99)  
(Movies) (p. 104)  
Recording Pixels (p. 72)  
Shooting Date and Time  
Switching the Display  
You can change the display using the l button.  
No Information  
Display  
Simple Information  
Display  
Detailed Information Focus Check Display  
Display (p. 114)  
You can also switch the display by pressing the l button while the  
image displays shortly after shooting. However, Simple Information will  
not display. You can set the display that displays first. Press the MENU  
button to select the 4 tab. Then set [Review Info].  
45  
         
Information Displayed on the Screen  
Display in Dark Conditions during Shooting  
The display automatically brightens when shooting in dark conditions,  
allowing you to check the composition (Night Display function). However, the  
brightness of the image on the screen, and the brightness of the actual  
image recorded may be different. Screen noise may appear and the  
movement of the subject may appear somewhat jagged on the screen. This  
has no effect on the recorded image.  
Overexposure Warning during Playback  
In “Detailed Information Display” (p. 45), overexposed areas of the image  
flash on the screen.  
Histogram during Playback  
The graph that appears in “Detailed  
Information Display” (p. 45) is called the  
histogram. The histogram shows the  
distribution and amount of brightness of  
an image. When the graph approaches  
the right side, the image is bright, but  
when it approaches the left side, the  
image is dark, and in this way you can  
judge the exposure.  
High  
Low  
Dark  
Bright  
Indicator  
The Indicator on the back of the camera (p. 43) will light or blink under the  
following conditions.  
Colors  
Status  
Operation Status  
Lights Shooting preparation complete (p. 25)/Display Off (p. 138)  
Blinks Recording/reading/transmitting image data (p. 25)  
Lights Shooting preparation complete (flash on) (p. 25)  
Blinks Camera shake warning (p. 62)  
Green  
Orange  
When the indicator blinks green, data is being recorded to/read from the  
memory card or various information is being transmitted. Do not turn off  
the power, open the memory card slot/battery cover, shake or jolt the  
camera. These actions may corrupt the image data or cause the camera  
or memory card to malfunction.  
46  
         
m FUNC. Menu – Basic Operations  
You can set commonly used functions using the FUNC. menu. The menu  
items and options differ depending on the mode (p. 156). You can also use  
the FUNC. menu in the playback mode.  
Display the FUNC. menu.  
Press the m button.  
Select a menu item.  
Press the op buttons, or turn the   
dial to select a menu item, then press the  
m button.  
Depending on the menu, the screen may  
switch. Select a menu item and make the  
setting.  
Selectable Options  
Menu Items  
Select an option.  
Press the op buttons or turn the  dial  
to select an option.  
To return to the menu, press the q button.  
Make the setting.  
Press the m button.  
47  
     
n Menu – Basic Operations  
Various functions can be set from the menus. The menu items are organized  
under tabs, such as for shooting (4) and playback (1). The menu items  
differ depending on the mode (pp. 158 161).  
Display the menu.  
Press the n button.  
Select a tab.  
Press the qr buttons, or move the zoom  
lever (p. 42) left or right to select a tab.  
Select a menu item.  
Press the op buttons or turn the  dial  
to select a menu item.  
Some items require you to press the m  
button to display a submenu in which you  
change the setting.  
Select an option.  
Press the qr buttons to select an option.  
Make the setting.  
Press the n button.  
X The standard screen will reappear.  
48  
     
Changing the Sound Settings  
You can silence or adjust the volume of camera sounds.  
Muting Sounds  
Display the menu.  
Press the n button.  
Select [Mute].  
Press the qr buttons to select the 3 tab.  
Press the op buttons or turn the  dial  
to select [Mute], then use the qr buttons  
to select [On].  
Adjusting the Volume  
Display the menu.  
Press the n button.  
Select [Volume].  
Press the qr buttons to select the 3  
tab.  
Press the op buttons or turn the  dial  
to select [Volume], then press the m  
button.  
Change the volume.  
Press the op buttons or turn the  dial  
to select an item, then use the qr buttons  
to adjust the volume.  
49  
     
Changing the Screen Brightness  
The screen brightness can be changed in two ways.  
With the Menu  
Display the menu.  
Press the n button.  
Select [LCD Brightness].  
Press the qr buttons to select the 3 tab.  
Press the op buttons or turn the  dial  
to select [LCD Brightness],  
Change the brightness.  
Press the qr buttons to change the  
brightness.  
Press the n button again to complete  
the setting.  
With the l Button  
Press the l button for more than one  
second.  
X The screen increases to maximum  
brightness regardless of the setting in the  
3 tab.  
Pressing the l button again for more  
than one second will return the screen to  
the original brightness.  
The next time you turn on the camera, the screen will be at the  
brightness setting selected in the 3 tab.  
When you have set the brightness to its highest setting in the 3 tab, you  
cannot change the brightness with the l button.  
50  
 
Returning the Camera to Default Settings  
When you have mistakenly changed a setting, you can reset the camera to  
the default settings.  
Display the menu.  
Press the n button.  
Select [Reset All].  
Press the qr buttons to select the 3  
tab.  
Press the op buttons or turn the  dial  
to select [Reset All], then press the m  
button.  
Reset the settings.  
Press the qr buttons or turn the  dial  
to select [OK], then press the m button.  
X The camera will reset to the default  
settings.  
Are there functions that cannot be reset?  
The [Date/Time] (p. 19) in the 3 tab, [Language] (p. 21), [Video System]  
(p. 116), [Time Zone] (p. 139), the image registered as [Start-up Image] (p. 146).  
The saved data for custom white balance (p. 75).  
Colors that were selected in Color Accent (p. 100) or Color Swap (p. 100).  
51  
   
Low Level Memory Card Formatting  
Perform low level formatting when you think that the recording/reading  
speed of a memory card has dropped. As you cannot retrieve the erased  
data, exercise adequate caution before low level formatting the memory  
card.  
Display the menu.  
Press the n button.  
Select [Format].  
Press the qr buttons to select the 3  
tab.  
Press the op buttons or turn the  dial  
to select [Format], then press the m  
button.  
Perform the low level format.  
Press the op buttons or turn the  dial  
to select [Low Level Format], then use the  
qr buttons to display  
.
Press the opqr buttons or turn the   
dial to select [OK], then press the m  
button.  
X Low level formatting starts.  
About low level formatting  
When the [Memory card error] message appears, or when the camera does not  
work correctly, low level formatting the memory card may solve the problem.  
Copy the images from the memory card to a computer or other device before low  
level formatting.  
Low level formatting may take longer than standard formatting (p. 22),  
since all recorded data are erased.  
You can stop a low level format of a memory card by selecting [Stop].  
When stopping low level formatting, the data will be erased but the  
memory card can be used without problem.  
52  
   
Power Saving Function (Auto Power Down)  
To save battery power, the camera shuts down automatically when it is not  
operated for a certain time.  
Power Saving during Shooting  
The monitor will turn off approximately 1 minute after the camera is last  
operated. After about 2 more minutes, the lens will retract and the power will  
turn off. When the monitor has turned off but the lens has not retracted yet,  
pressing the shutter button halfway (p. 23) turns on the monitor and shooting  
can continue.  
Power Saving during Playback  
The power will turn off approximately 5 minutes after the camera is last operated.  
You can turn off the Power Saving Function (p. 138).  
You can adjust the time before the monitor turns off (p. 138).  
53  
   
Clock Functions  
You can check the current time.  
Hold the m button pressed.  
X A screen like that on the left appears  
showing the current time.  
You can change the display color by  
changing the camera's orientation,  
pressing the qr buttons or turning the  
 dial.  
Press the m button to cancel the clock  
display.  
Press and hold the m button, then press the power button to display the  
clock.  
54  
 
3
Shooting in Special  
Conditions and Commonly  
Used Functions  
This chapter explains how to shoot in different conditions, as well as  
how to use common functions, such as the flash and self-timer.  
When you select a shooting mode that matches a particular set of  
conditions, the camera will automatically select any necessary settings.  
All you need to do is press the shutter button to take an optimized picture.  
This chapter assumes the mode dial is set to A, 9 or K (p. 42).  
55  
 
9 Shooting in Easy mode  
The explanations of camera operations and behavior below are basically the  
same as in "A Taking Pictures" (p. 24) except that operational  
instructions are displayed on the screen, and the camera is set so that only  
the buttons explained on this page are functional. This prevents incorrect  
operation of the camera, allowing even beginners to take worry-free  
pictures.  
Select the 9 mode.  
Set the mode dial to 9.  
Shoot.  
Follow Steps 3-5 on pages 2425 to shoot  
(there will be no sound played).  
Turning Off the Flash  
Press the r button.  
X The flash turns off and ! appears.  
X Pressing r again displays  
on the  
screen, and the flash will automatically fire  
in low light conditions.  
56  
   
9 Viewing or Erasing in Easy mode  
The explanations for viewing or erasing unwanted images are basically the  
same as in "1 Viewing Images" (p. 27) and "/ Erasing Images" (p. 28)  
except that operational instructions are displayed on the screen, and the  
camera is set so that only the buttons explained on this page are functional.  
This prevents incorrect operation of the camera, allowing even beginners to  
view or erase images worry-free.  
Viewing Single Images  
Press the 1 button.  
X The last image you took will appear.  
Select an image.  
Press the qr buttons to switch between  
images.  
Viewing Slideshows  
Press the 1 button.  
Press the m button.  
X All the shots you have taken will display  
for about 3 seconds each.  
Press the m button again to stop the  
slideshow.  
Erasing Images  
Select an image to erase.  
X Press the qr buttons to select the image  
you want to erase.  
Erase the image.  
After pressing the p button, press the qr  
buttons or turn the  dial to select  
[Erase]. Then press the m button.  
X The selected image will be erased.  
57  
 
Shooting in Various Conditions  
The camera will select the necessary settings for the conditions in which  
you wish to shoot when you select the matching mode.  
Select the shooting mode.  
Set the mode dial to the desired mode.  
Shoot.  
I Take portraits (Portrait)  
Produces a soft effect when  
photographing people.  
JTake landscapes (Landscape)  
For shooting majestic landscapes.  
F Take snapshots at night  
(Night Snapshot)  
Lets you take beautiful snapshots of  
people against city nightscapes or night  
backgrounds.  
If you hold the camera firmly, you can take  
pictures with reduced camera shake, even  
without a tripod.  
V Take shots of kids and pets  
(Kids&Pets)  
Lets you capture subjects that move  
around, such as children and pets, without  
missing photo opportunities.  
58  
                 
K Shooting in Special Scenes  
H Take indoor shots (Indoor)  
Lets you shoot indoors with natural colors.  
In F, V or H mode, images may appear coarse because the ISO speed  
(p. 74) is increased to match the shooting conditions.  
K Shooting in Special Scenes  
The camera will select the necessary settings for the conditions in which you  
wish to shoot when you select the matching mode.  
Select the shooting mode.  
Set the mode dial to K.  
Press the m button, then use the op  
buttons or turn the  dial to select U,  
then press the m button again.  
Press the op buttons or turn the  dial  
to select a shooting mode, then press the  
m button.  
Shoot.  
U Shoot sunsets (Sunset)  
Lets you take shots of sunsets in vivid  
colors.  
59  
           
K Shooting in Special Scenes  
, Take nightscapes (Night Scene)  
Lets you take beautifully lit city  
nightscapes or night backgrounds.  
t Take shots of fireworks  
(Fireworks)  
Lets you take shots of fireworks in vivid  
colors.  
w Take shots of people at the beach  
(Beach)  
Lets you take bright shots of people on  
sandy beaches where the reflected  
sunlight is strong.  
y Take shots of aquatic life in an  
aquarium (Aquarium)  
Lets you take natural-colored shots of  
aquatic life in indoor aquariums.  
OTake shots of foliage (Foliage)  
Lets you shoot trees and leaves, such as  
new growth, autumn leaves or blossoms,  
in vivid colors.  
60  
                   
K Shooting in Special Scenes  
P Take shots of people in snow  
(Snow)  
Lets you take bright, natural-colored shots  
of people against snowy backgrounds.  
Z Shoot using high ISO speed  
(ISO 3200)  
Sets the ISO speed to 3200, and lets you  
shoot without camera shake or subject  
blurring even in low light conditions.  
Recording pixels are set to  
(1600 x  
1200 pixels, p. 72).  
In t mode, attach the camera to a tripod to prevent the camera from  
moving and blurring the image. Additionally, you are recommended to  
set [IS Mode] to [Off] (p. 144).  
In y mode, images may appear coarse because the ISO speed (p. 74)  
is increased to match the shooting conditions.  
In Z mode, images may appear coarse.  
61  
         
! Turning the Flash Off  
You can shoot with the flash turned off.  
Press the r button.  
Select !.  
Press the qr buttons or turn the  dial  
to select !, then press the m button.  
X ! will appear on the screen.  
Follow the steps above to return the  
setting to  
.
What if the indicator blinks orange and a flashing  
appears?  
When you press the shutter button halfway in low light conditions where camera  
shake is likely, the indicator will blink orange and a flashing  
will appear on the  
screen. Attach the camera to a tripod to prevent it from moving.  
62  
       
Zooming in More Closely on Subjects  
(Digital Zoom)  
You can use the digital zoom to zoom up to a maximum of 48x and capture  
subjects that are too far away for the optical zoom (p. 24) to enlarge. The  
images may appear coarse, however, depending on the recording pixel  
setting (p. 72) and the zoom factor used.  
Move the zoom lever toward i.  
Hold the lever until zooming stops.  
X When you release the zoom lever, the  
largest possible zoom factor without  
image deterioration, and  
will appear.  
Move it toward i again.  
X The digital zoom will further zoom in on  
the subject.  
Zoom Factors at which Images Deteriorate  
Recording Pixels  
Optical Zoom  
Digital Zoom  
12x  
15x  
19x  
30x  
48x  
: No image deterioration (zoom factor appears white)  
: Image deterioration (zoom factor appears blue)  
: Maximum zoom factor without deterioration (Safety Zoom)  
Turning off the digital zoom  
To turn off the digital zoom, press the n button, select the 4 tab, and select  
[Digital Zoom] and the [Off] option.  
63  
   
Zooming in More Closely on Subjects (Digital Zoom)  
The focal length when using digital zoom is 336 1344 mm (35mm film  
equivalent).  
Digital Tele-Converter  
The focal length of the lens can be increased by an equivalent of 1.5x or  
2.0x. This enables a faster shutter speed and less chance of camera shake  
than the zoom (including digital zoom) used by itself at the same zoom  
factor.  
The images may appear coarse, however, depending on the combination of  
recording pixel (p. 72) and digital tele-converter settings used.  
Select [Digital Zoom].  
Press the n button.  
Select the 4 tab, then select [Digital  
Zoom].  
Accept the setting.  
Press the qr buttons to select [1.5x] or  
[2.0x].  
Pressing the n button will restore the  
shooting screen.  
X The view will be enlarged, the zoom factor  
will display on the screen.  
To return to standard digital zoom, select  
[Digital Zoom] and the [Standard] option.  
Combinations that Cause Image Deterioration  
Using [1.5x] at a recording pixel setting of  
deterioration (the zoom factor will display in blue).  
Using [2.0x] at a recording pixel setting of  
deterioration (the zoom factor will display in blue).  
or  
will cause image  
,
or will cause image  
The respective focal lengths when using [1.5x] and [2.0x] are 42 –  
504 mm and 56 – 672 mm (35mm film equivalent).  
The digital tele-converter cannot be used together with the digital zoom.  
64  
   
Inserting the Date and Time  
You can insert the shooting date and time in the lower right corner of an  
image. Once inserted, however, they cannot be deleted. Be sure to check  
beforehand that the date and time are correctly set (p. 19).  
Select [Date Stamp].  
Press the n button and select the 4  
tab, then select [Date Stamp] and use the  
qr buttons to select [Date] or [Date &  
Time].  
Press the n button again to accept  
the setting.  
X [DATE] will appear on the screen.  
Shoot.  
X You can insert the shooting date and time  
in the image's lower right corner.  
To restore to the original setting, select  
[Off] in Step 1.  
Inserting and printing the date and time in images which do  
not have an embedded date and time  
Use the DPOF print settings (p. 133) to print.  
Use the included software to print.  
Refer to the Software Starter Guide for details.  
Connect the camera to a printer to print.  
Refer to the Personal Printing Guide for details.  
65  
 
Ò Using the Self-Timer  
The self-timer can be used to shoot a group photo that includes the camera  
operator. The camera will activate approximately 10 seconds after the  
shutter button is pressed.  
Press the p button.  
Select Ò.  
Press the op buttons or turn the  dial  
to select Ò, then press the m button.  
X Once set, Ò will appear.  
Shoot.  
Press the shutter button halfway to focus  
on the subject, then press it fully.  
X When the self-timer starts, the lamp blinks  
and the self-timer sound plays.  
X Two seconds before the shutter releases,  
the lamp and sound speed up (the lamp  
remains lit when the flash will fire).  
To cancel shooting with the self-timer after  
countdown has started, press the p  
button.  
To restore the original setting, select  
in Step 2.  
You can change the delay time and number of shots (p. 80).  
66  
         
" Using the Face Self-Timer  
Once you compose the shot, such as for a group photo, and press the  
shutter button, the camera will take three shots in a row two seconds after it  
detects your face (p. 84) when you enter the composition.  
Select ".  
Follow Step 2 on p. 66 and select ".  
Compose the shot and press the  
shutter button halfway.  
Make sure a green frame appears on the  
face in focus and white frames appear on  
other faces.  
Press the shutter button fully.  
X The camera will enter shooting stand-by,  
and [Look straight at camera to start count  
down] will appear on the screen.  
X The lamp will blink and the self-timer  
sound will play.  
Join the subjects and look at the camera.  
X When the camera detects a new face, the  
lamp and sound will speed up (the lamp  
remains lit when the flash will fire), and  
two seconds later the shutter will release.  
X The second and third shots will continue in  
succession.  
To restore the original setting, select  
in Step 2 on p. 66.  
What if a face is not detected?  
Even if your face is not detected after joining the subjects, the shutter will release  
approximately 30 seconds later.  
Changing the number of shots  
For the screen in Step 1, press the n button, then press the qr buttons  
to change the number of shots. Press the m button to accept the setting.  
67  
   
68  
4
Selecting Settings Yourself  
In this chapter you will learn how to use the various functions in G  
mode to progressively advance your shooting skills.  
This chapter assumes that the mode dial is set to G.  
G stands for Program AE.  
Before attempting to shoot using a function explained in this chapter in  
modes other than G mode, check if the function is available in those  
modes (pp. 156 159).  
69  
 
G Shooting in Program AE  
You can select the settings for various functions to suit your preferences.  
AE stands for Auto Exposure.  
Set the mode dial to G (p. 42).  
Adjust the settings according to  
your purposes (pp. 70 80).  
Shoot.  
What if the shutter speed and aperture value are displayed  
in red?  
If a correct exposure cannot be obtained when pressing the shutter button  
halfway, the shutter speed and aperture value display in red. Try the following  
settings to obtain the correct exposure.  
Turn on the flash (p. 70)  
Select a higher ISO speed (p. 74)  
h Turning the Flash On  
You can make the flash fire every time you shoot. At maximum wide angle,  
the flash range is approximately 50 cm – 3.0 m (1.6 – 9.8 ft.), and at  
maximum telephoto, it is 1.0 – 2.0 m (3.3 – 6.6 ft.)  
Select h.  
After pressing the r button, press the qr  
buttons or turn the  dial to select h,  
then press the m button.  
X Once set, h will appear.  
If you take multiple shots with the flash, the flash may become warm. This  
is not a malfunction.  
70  
         
e
Shooting Close-ups (Macro/Super Macro)  
You can shoot an object at a close distance or even shoot extreme close-  
ups of it. In œ mode you can approach the subject even closer than in e  
mode. The optical zoom (p. 24) or digital zoom (p. 63) cannot be used.  
Press the q button.  
Select e or œ.  
Press the qr buttons or turn the  
Â
dial to  
button.  
select  
e
or œ, then press the  
m
X e or œ will appear on the screen.  
X In œ, the zoom will lock at the maximum  
wide angle.  
To restore to the original setting, select  
.
Shooting Range  
Shooting Range (Maximum Wide Angle)  
2 – 50 cm (0.79 in. – 1.6 ft.)  
e Macro  
œ Super Macro  
0 – 2 cm (0 – 0.79 in.)  
About the Zoom Bar in e.  
When you move the zoom lever, the zoom bar appears on the monitor.  
The camera cannot focus in e in the yellow portion of the bar.  
When zooming within the range of the yellow bar, e will be grayed out  
and shooting will be done in  
.
Using Î  
You are recommended to attach the camera to a tripod and shoot in Î, to prevent  
the camera from moving and blurring the image (p. 79).  
71  
   
Changing the Recording Pixels  
If you use the flash when shooting in macro mode, the edges of the image  
may darken.  
Changing the Recording Pixels  
You can select the recording pixels (image size) from six settings.  
Select the recording pixels.  
Press the m button and select  
press the m button again.  
, then  
Select an option.  
Press the op buttons or turn the  dial  
to select an option, then press the m  
button.  
X The setting you selected will display on  
the screen.  
If you select  
, you cannot use the Digital Zoom (p. 63) or Digital Tele-  
Converter (p. 64).  
Changing the Compression Ratio (Image Quality)  
You can select from the following two levels of compression ratio (image  
quality):  
(Fine),  
(Normal).  
Select the image quality.  
Press the m button and select  
press the m button again.  
, then  
Select an option.  
Press the op buttons or turn the  dial  
to select an option, then press the m  
button.  
X The setting you selected will display on  
the screen.  
72  
         
Changing the Compression Ratio (Image Quality)  
Approximate Values for Recording Pixels and Compression  
Ratio  
Number of Recordable  
Compression Single Image Data  
Images  
Recording Pixels  
Ratio  
Size (Approx. KB)  
2 GB  
626  
8 GB  
2505  
3084  
1474  
2060  
980  
(Large)  
12 M/4000 x 3000  
1280  
930  
5116  
3721  
(Medium 1)  
8 M/3264 x 2448  
1920  
1365  
2672  
3235  
6146  
10245  
15368  
830  
7675  
1395  
695  
5457  
(Medium 2)  
5 M/2592 x 1944  
10679  
12927  
24562  
40937  
61406  
3318  
558  
(Medium 3)  
2 M/1600 x 1200  
278  
150  
(Small)  
0.3 M/640 x 480  
84  
2311  
1105  
(Widescreen)  
4000 x 2248  
1707  
6822  
The values in the table are measured according to Canon standards and may change  
depending on the subject, memory card and camera settings.  
Approximate Values for Paper Size  
Suitable for sending images as e-mail  
attachments.  
For printing on wide size paper.  
A2  
A3  
A4, Letter size  
5" x 7"  
Postcard size  
3.5" x 5"  
73  
   
- Changing the ISO Speed  
Select the ISO speed.  
Press the m button and select  
press the m button again.  
, then  
Select an option.  
Press the op buttons or turn the  dial  
to select an option, then press the m  
button.  
X The setting you selected will display on  
the screen.  
Approximate Values for ISO Speed  
Automatically adjusts the ISO speed to the shooting mode and shooting  
conditions.  
Low  
Fine weather conditions, outdoor shooting.  
Cloudy, Twilight  
Nightscapes, Dark interiors  
High  
Changing the ISO speed  
Lowering the ISO speed results in sharper images, but there may be an  
increased chance of image blurring in certain shooting conditions.  
Raising the ISO speed results in a faster shutter speed, reducing camera shake  
and letting the flash reach greater distances to the subject. The images,  
however, will appear coarse.  
When the camera is set to  
, you can press the shutter button halfway  
to display the automatically set ISO speed.  
With ISO 3200 you can set an even faster speed (p. 61).  
74  
       
Adjusting the White Balance  
The white balance (WB) function sets the optimal white balance for natural  
looking colors.  
Select the white balance.  
Press the m button and select  
press the m button again.  
, then  
Select an option.  
Press the op buttons or turn the  dial  
to select an option, then press the m  
button.  
X The setting you selected will display on  
the screen.  
Auto  
Automatically sets the optimal white balance for the shooting conditions.  
Fine weather conditions, outdoor shooting  
Day Light  
Cloudy  
Tungsten  
Cloudy, shady, twilight conditions  
Tungsten, bulb-type (3-wavelength) fluorescent lighting  
Warm-white fluorescent, cool-white fluorescent, warm-white-type  
(3-wavelength) fluorescent lighting  
Fluorescent  
Daylight fluorescent, daylight-type (3-wavelength) fluorescent  
lighting  
Fluorescent H  
Custom  
Manually sets a custom white balance.  
Custom White Balance  
You can adjust the white balance to the light source at the shooting location.  
Make sure you use the same settings to take your white balance as you will  
use during actual shooting.  
In Step 2 above, select  
.
Make sure the entire screen is filled with  
the white subject, then press the l  
button.  
X The tint on the screen will change when a  
white balance data is set.  
After shooting, return the setting to  
.
75  
       
Adjusting the Brightness (Exposure Compensation)  
It is recommended to set the exposure compensation to ±0 (p. 76).  
When you take the white balance data using the flash, be sure to take it  
in an optimal shooting range (p. 75).  
Adjusting the Brightness (Exposure  
Compensation)  
You can adjust the standard exposure set by the camera in 1/3-stop  
increments in the range of -2 to +2.  
Select the exposure  
compensation.  
Press the o button.  
Adjust the brightness.  
While watching the screen, turn the   
dial to adjust the brightness and press the  
o button.  
After the picture has been taken, return  
the setting to  
(zero).  
76  
     
W Continuous Shooting  
You can shoot continuously at a fixed interval.  
Select the drive mode.  
Press the m button and select  
press the m button again.  
, then  
Select W,  
or  
.
Press the op buttons or turn the  dial  
to select W,  
button.  
or  
, then press the m  
Shoot.  
X
As long as you hold the shutter button down,  
the camera will shoot successive images.  
Shooting  
Interval  
Drive Mode  
Description  
For continuous shooting, the focus and  
exposure are locked when the shutter  
button is pressed halfway.  
Approx. 0.8  
sec./image  
Continuous  
The camera shoots continuously and  
focuses. The [AF Frame] is fixed to  
[Center].  
Approx. 0.5  
sec./image  
Continuous Shooting AF  
Continuous Shooting LV  
The camera shoots continuously with the  
focus fixed to the position set in manual  
focus.  
Approx. 0.6  
sec./image  
Cannot be used with the self-timer (pp. 66, 67, 80).  
As the number of images increases, the shooting intervals may take  
longer.  
If the flash fires, shooting intervals may take longer.  
77  
   
Changing the Tone of an Image (My Colors)  
You can change the tone of an image to sepia or black and white when shooting.  
Select My Colors.  
Press the m button and select  
press the m button again.  
, then  
Select an option.  
Press the op buttons or turn the  dial  
to select an option, then press the m  
button.  
X The setting you select will display on the  
screen.  
After shooting, return the setting to  
.
My Colors Off  
Vivid  
Emphasizes the contrast and color saturation for a vivid  
impression.  
Tones down the contrast and color saturation for neutral  
hues.  
Neutral  
Sepia  
B/W  
Sepia tones.  
Black and white.  
Like the Vivid Red, Vivid Green or Vivid Blue effects,  
produces intense natural appearing colors like those  
obtained with positive film.  
Positive Film  
Lighter Skin Tone  
Darker Skin Tone  
Makes skin tones lighter.  
Makes skin tones darker.  
Emphasizes blue tints. Makes the sky, ocean and other  
blue subjects more vivid.  
Vivid Blue  
Emphasizes green tints. Makes mountains, foliage and  
other green subjects more vivid.  
Vivid Green  
Vivid Red  
Emphasizes red tints. Makes red subjects more vivid.  
You can adjust contrast, sharpness, and color saturation  
etc. to your preference (p. 79).  
Custom Color  
The white balance cannot be set in the  
In the and mode, colors other than people’s skin color may  
change. You may not obtain the expected results with some skin colors.  
and  
modes (p. 75).  
78  
         
Î Shooting Using the Two Second Self-Timer  
Custom Color  
The contrast, sharpness, color saturation, red, green, blue, and skin tones in  
an image can be selected and set from 5 different levels.  
Follow Step 2 on p. 78 and select  
,
then press the l button.  
Press the op buttons to select an option,  
then use the qr buttons or turn the   
dial to select a value.  
The more to the right, the stronger/deeper  
the effect gets, the more to the left, the  
weaker/lighter the effect gets.  
Press the  
setting.  
l
button to accept the  
Î
Shooting Using the Two Second Self-Timer  
You can set the self-timer to a delay of approximately two seconds.  
Select Î.  
After pressing the p button, press the  
op buttons or turn the  dial to select  
Î, then press the m button.  
X Once set, Î will appear on the screen.  
Follow Step 3 on p. 66 to shoot.  
79  
       
$ Customizing the Self-Timer  
You can set the time delay (0 – 30 seconds) and the number of shots taken  
(1 – 10 shots).  
Select $.  
Press the p button, then use the op  
buttons or turn the  dial to select $,  
then press the n button.  
Select the settings.  
Press the op buttons to select [Delay] or  
[Shots].  
Press the qr buttons or turn the  dial  
to select a value, then press the m  
button.  
Follow Step 3 on p. 66 to shoot.  
What if the number of shots is set to two or more shots?  
Exposure and white balance settings are set with the first shot.  
When you set the time delay for more than 2 seconds, the self-timer lamp and  
sound speed up 2 seconds before the shutter releases (when the flash will fire,  
the lamp lights).  
If the flash fires, the shooting interval may be longer.  
If you set a high number of shots, the shooting interval may be longer.  
If the memory card becomes full, shooting stops automatically.  
80  
     
Shooting Using a TV Monitor  
You can use a TV to display the camera screen content.  
Connect the camera to a TV as described in “Viewing Images on a TV” (p. 116).  
Shooting procedures are the same as when using the camera’s monitor.  
TV display is not available when using the HDMI Cable HTC-100 (sold  
separately) to connect the camera to a high-definition TV.  
Changing the Composition with the  
Focus Lock  
While you press and hold the shutter button halfway, the focus and exposure  
are fixed. You can now recompose and shoot. This is called Focus Lock.  
Focus.  
Center the subject you want in focus, and  
press the shutter button halfway.  
Confirm that the AF Frame is green.  
Recompose.  
Hold the shutter button pressed halfway  
and recompose the scene.  
Shoot.  
Press the shutter button fully.  
81  
     
82  
5
Getting More Out of Your  
Camera  
This chapter serves as the advanced version of Chapter 4 and  
explains how to take pictures using various functions.  
This chapter assumes that the mode dial is set to G.  
The sections “M Setting the Shutter Speed” (p. 92), “B Setting the  
Aperture Value” (p. 93), “D Setting the Shutter Speed and Aperture  
Value” (p. 94), assume that the mode dial is set to these modes.  
The section “Setting the Flash Exposure Compensation” (p. 98) assumes  
that the mode dial is set to M or B mode.  
This chapter explains how to set the mode dial to K, “Changing the  
Color and Shooting” (p. 100), “L Shooting Stitch Assist Images”  
(p. 102), and various other modes.  
Before attempting to shoot using a function explained in this chapter in  
modes other than G mode, check if the function is available in those  
modes (pp. 156 159).  
83  
 
Changing the AF Frame Mode  
You can change the AF (Auto Focus) frame mode to match the conditions  
you want to shoot.  
Select [AF Frame].  
Press the n button, select the 4  
tab, and then select the [AF Frame] menu  
item. Use the qr buttons to select an  
option.  
Face Detect  
Detects people’s faces and sets the focus, exposure (evaluative metering  
only) and white balance (  
only).  
When the camera is pointed at subjects, a white frame appears on the  
face the camera judges to be the main subject, and gray frames (max. 2)  
will appear on other faces. When the shutter button is pressed halfway, up  
to 9 green frames will appear on faces on which the camera focuses.  
If a face is not detected and only gray frames (no white frame) appear,  
the image will be taken in [Center].  
Examples of faces that cannot be detected:  
Subjects that are far away or extremely close.  
Subjects that are dark or light.  
Faces turned to the side or at a diagonal, or faces with a portion hidden.  
The camera may mistakenly identify non-human subjects as a face.  
If the camera cannot focus when you press the shutter button halfway,  
the AF frame will not appear.  
Center  
The AF frame is fixed at the center. This is effective for focusing on a specific point.  
You can reduce the AF frame size  
Press the n button, select the 4 tab, then select the [AF Frame Size]  
menu item and [Small] option.  
The setting is configured to [Normal] when the Digital Zoom (p. 63) or Digital  
Tele-converter (p. 64) is used.  
If the camera cannot focus when you press the shutter button halfway, the  
AF frame will turn yellow.  
84  
     
Magnifying the Focal Point  
You can magnify the AF frame and check the focus.  
Select [AF-Point Zoom].  
Press the n button, select the 4  
tab, and then select the [AF-Point Zoom]  
menu item. Use the qr buttons to select  
[On].  
Check the focus.  
Press the shutter button halfway.  
X In [Face Detect], the face selected as the  
main subject will appear magnified.  
X In [Center], the contents of the center AF  
frame will appear magnified.  
What if the display does not magnify?  
The display will not appear magnified in [Face Detect] mode if a face cannot be  
detected or is too big in relation to the screen. In [Center] mode, it will not appear  
magnified if the camera cannot focus.  
The magnified display will not appear when using the Digital Zoom (p. 63)  
or Digital Tele-Converter (p. 64), Servo AF (p. 86), or when connected to  
a TV (p. 81).  
85  
   
Shooting with the AF Lock  
The focus can be locked. After locking the focus, the focal distance will not  
change even when you release your finger from the shutter button.  
Lock the focus.  
Keep the shutter button pressed halfway  
and press the q button.  
and the MF indicator appear. You can  
check the distance to the subject.  
X
Compose the scene and shoot.  
Shooting with Servo AF  
While the shutter button is pressed halfway, the focus will continue to adjust,  
allowing you to take pictures of moving subjects without missing a shot.  
Select [Servo AF].  
Press the n button and select [Servo  
AF] on the 4 tab, and use the qr  
buttons to select [On].  
Focus.  
Focus will be maintained where the blue  
AF frame displays while you press the  
shutter button halfway.  
The camera may not be able to focus in some conditions.  
You cannot shoot with the AF lock in this mode.  
You cannot set the Servo AF mode if you have set the [AF-Point Zoom]  
option in the 4 tab to [On].  
Not available in Face Self-Timer (p. 67).  
86  
         
0 Selecting the Person to Focus On  
(Face Select)  
You can select a specific person's face to focus on and then shoot.  
Register 0 to the c button  
Frame  
Set the Face Select mode.  
Point the camera toward the face and  
press the c button.  
X After [Face Select : On] displays, a face  
frame  
will appear around the face  
detected as the main subject.  
Even if the subject moves, the frame will  
follow the subject within a certain range.  
If a face is not detected,  
will not appear.  
Select the face on which to focus.  
If you press the c button, the frame will  
move to another face detected by the  
camera.  
When the frame has made a full circuit of  
all detected faces, the AF frame mode  
screen will reappear.  
Shoot.  
Press the shutter button halfway. The face  
frame of the selected face will change into  
a green  
.
Press the shutter button fully to shoot.  
Confirming the number of detected faces  
Keeping the c button pressed will display the number of faces detected by the  
camera (35 at the most) (green: main subject’s face, white: detected face).  
87  
   
Switching the Focus Setting and Shoot  
You can switch the AF setting and shoot.  
The camera focuses continually on whatever it is aimed at even when  
Continuous  
Single  
the shutter button is not pressed. This allows you to shoot without  
missing opportunities.  
The camera only focuses when the shutter button is pressed halfway.  
This conserves battery power.  
Select [AF Mode].  
Press the n button, select the 4  
tab, and then select the [AF Mode] menu  
item. Use the qr buttons to select  
[Continuous] or [Single].  
Changing the Metering Mode  
You can change the metering mode (brightness measuring function) to  
match the shooting conditions.  
Select the metering mode.  
Press the m button and select  
press the m button again.  
, then  
Select an option.  
Press the op buttons or turn the  
to select an option, then press the  
button.  
Â
m
dial  
X
The setting will display on the screen.  
Suitable for standard shooting conditions, including back  
lit shots. Automatically adjusts the exposure to match the  
the shooting conditions.  
Evaluative  
Averages the light metered from the entire frame, but  
gives greater weight to the center.  
Center Weighted Avg.  
Spot  
Only meters within the  
(Spot AE Point frame) that  
appears at the center of the screen.  
88  
         
Shooting in Manual Focus Mode  
You can manually set the focus.  
Select  
.
Press the q button, then use the qr  
buttons or turn the  dial to select  
then press the m button again.  
,
and the MF indicator appear.  
Focus and shoot.  
Turn the  dial to adjust the focus to a  
value that displays in the MF indicator.  
You cannot change the AF frame setting while focusing manually. If you  
want to change the AF frame, cancel the manual focus mode first.  
If [MF-Point Zoom] is set to [On] in the 4 tab, the image at the center of  
the AF frame is displayed enlarged. If the AF mode is set to [Continuous]  
(p. 88), turn the  dial to enlarge the image.  
89  
 
Using the Manual Focus in Combination  
with the Auto Focus (Safety MF)  
First, manual focus is used to roughly focus, then from that focus position the  
camera automatically focuses more accurately.  
Select [Safety MF].  
Press the n button, select the 4  
tab, and then select the [Safety MF] menu  
item. Use the qr buttons to select [On].  
Focus and shoot.  
First focus manually and then press the  
shutter button halfway.  
X The focus will be fine-tuned at the optimal  
point of focus.  
To shoot, press the shutter button all the  
way down (press fully).  
¤ Shooting with the AE Lock  
When you wish to take several shots with the same exposure, you can set the  
exposure and focus separately using the AE lock. AE stands for “Auto  
Exposure”.  
Lock the exposure.  
Point the camera toward the subject and  
press the o button while pressing the  
shutter button halfway.  
X When ¤ appears, the exposure will be  
set.  
If you release your finger from the shutter  
button and press the o button again, ¤  
will disappear and the AE will unlock.  
Compose the scene and shoot.  
90  
       
¤ Shooting with the FE Lock  
Just as with the AE lock (p. 90), you can lock the exposure for shooting with  
the flash. FE stands for “Flash Exposure”.  
Select h (p. 70).  
Lock the exposure.  
Point the camera toward the subject and  
press the o button while pressing the  
shutter button halfway.  
X The flash will fire and when ¤ appears,  
the flash output will be retained.  
If you release your finger from the shutter  
button and press the o button again, ¤  
will disappear and the FE will unlock.  
Compose the scene and shoot.  
Shooting with Slow Synchro  
You can make the main subject, such as people, appear bright by having the  
camera provide the appropriate illumination with the flash. At the same time,  
you can use a slow shutter speed to brighten the background that the light  
from the flash cannot reach.  
Select .  
Press the r button, then use the qr  
buttons or turn the  dial to select ,  
then press the m button again.  
X Once set, will appear on the screen.  
Shoot.  
Even if the flash fires, ensure that the  
subject does not move until the shutter  
sound ends.  
Attach the camera to a tripod to prevent the camera from moving and  
blurring the image. It is recommended to set the [IS Mode] to [Off] when  
shooting with a tripod (p. 144).  
91  
     
M Setting the Shutter Speed  
You can set the shutter to the speed at which you want to shoot. The camera  
will set the appropriate aperture value for the shutter speed you set.  
M stands for "Time value".  
Set the mode dial to M.  
Make the setting.  
Turn the  dial to set the shutter speed.  
Shoot.  
Available Shutter Speeds  
15", 13", 10", 8", 6", 5", 4", 3"2, 2"5, 2", 1"6, 1"3, 1", 0"8, 0"6, 0"5, 0"4, 0"3, 1/4, 1/5, 1/6,  
1/8, 1/10, 1/13, 1/15, 1/20, 1/25, 1/30, 1/40, 1/50, 1/60, 1/80, 1/100, 1/125, 1/160, 1/200,  
1/250, 1/320, 1/400, 1/500, 1/640, 1/800, 1/1000, 1/1250, 1/1600, 1/2000, 1/2500,  
1/3200  
1/160 indicates 1/160 second, 0"3 indicates 0.3 second and 2" indicates 2  
seconds.  
The fastest shutter speed when using the flash is 1/500 second. The camera  
automatically resets the shutter speed to 1/500 second if a faster speed is  
selected.  
Depending on the zoom position, some shutter speeds may not be available.  
What if aperture value is displayed in red?  
If the aperture value displays in red when the shutter button is pressed halfway,  
the scene has exceeded the correct exposure limits. Adjust the shutter speed  
until the aperture value displays in white. Safety shift can also be used (p. 93).  
When shutter speeds of 1.3 seconds or slower are used, images are  
processed to eliminate noise after being taken. A certain amount of  
processing time may be needed before you can take the next shot.  
92  
   
B Setting the Aperture Value  
You can set the aperture to a value at which you want to shoot. The camera  
will set the appropriate shutter speed for the aperture value you set.  
B stands for "Aperture value".  
Set the mode dial to B.  
Make the setting.  
Turn the  dial to set the aperture value.  
Shoot.  
Available Aperture Values  
F3.4, F4.0, F4.5, F5.0, F5.3, F5.6, F6.3, F7.1, F8.0  
The fastest shutter speed when using the flash is 1/500 second. As a result, the  
camera will not set a shutter speed faster than 1/500 second regardless of the  
the aperture value you set.  
Depending on the zoom position, some shutter speeds may not be available.  
What if shutter speed is displayed in red?  
If the shutter speed displays in red when the shutter button is pressed halfway,  
the scene has exceeded the correct exposure limits. Adjust the aperture value  
until the shutter speed displays in white. Safety shift can also be used.  
Safety Shift  
With M and B modes, if [Safety Shift] is set to [On] in the 4 tab, the shutter  
speed or aperture value is automatically adjusted for the correct exposure when it  
cannot be otherwise obtained.  
Safety Shift is disabled when the flash is enabled.  
93  
       
D Setting the Shutter Speed and  
Aperture Value  
You can manually set the shutter speed and aperture to shoot images.  
D stands for "Manual".  
Set the mode dial to D.  
Standard Exposure Level  
Indicator  
Make the setting.  
Press the o button to select the shutter  
speed or aperture value.  
Exposure Level  
Turn the  dial to set a value.  
X The set exposure level appears on the  
indicator. You can check the difference to  
the standard exposure level.  
X When the difference is more than ±2  
stops, the set exposure level appears in  
red. When you press the shutter button  
halfway, "-2" or "+2" appears in red.  
Aperture Value  
Shutter Speed  
The standard exposure is calculated according to the selected metering  
method (p. 88).  
If you use the zoom after making settings or change the composition, the  
exposure level may change.  
Depending on the shutter speed or aperture value set, the monitor  
brightness may change. If the flash is set to h, the monitor brightness  
will not change.  
94  
   
@ Making Dark Subjects Appear  
Brighter (i-Contrast)  
The camera can automatically detect and compensate for faces or subjects  
that appear dark in certain shooting conditions.  
Select [i-Contrast].  
Press the n button, select the 4  
tab, and then select the [i-Contrast] menu  
item. Use the qr buttons to select [Auto].  
X @ will appear on the screen.  
Under some conditions, the image may appear coarse or the exposure  
setting may not be suitable.  
You can correct recorded images (p. 129).  
95  
   
Œ Red-Eye Correction  
You can automatically correct red eyes in images taken with the flash.  
Select [Flash Settings].  
Press the n button, select [Flash  
Settings] from the 4 tab and press the  
m button.  
Adjust the setting.  
Press the op buttons or turn the  dial  
to select [Red-Eye Corr.] and press the  
qr buttons to select [On].  
X Œ will appear on the screen.  
Red-eye correction may be applied to other red parts than red eyes. For  
example, when red make-up has been used around eyes.  
You can correct recorded images (p. 130).  
If you press the r button as shown on the screen in Step 2 and then  
press the n button, the Flash Settings screen will display (p. 48).  
96  
   
Checking for Shut Eyes  
When the camera detects that there is a possibility that people have their  
eyes shut,  
appears.  
Select [Blink Detection].  
Press the n button, select the 4  
tab, and then select the [Blink Detection]  
menu item. Use the qr buttons to select  
[On].  
Shoot.  
X When a person with shut eyes is detected,  
a frame and  
appear for a few seconds.  
In W, " and $ mode, the function is only available for the last image  
shot.  
Setting the Flash  
The flash automatically adjusts depending on the subject and fires. You can  
change the settings so that the flash does not adjust automatically.  
Select [Flash Settings].  
Press the n button, select [Flash  
Settings] from the 4 tab and press the  
m button.  
Make the setting.  
Press the op buttons or turn the  dial  
to select [Flash Mode], then press the qr  
buttons to select [Auto] or [Manual].  
97  
     
Setting the Flash Exposure Compensation  
Just like with exposure compensation (p. 76), you can adjust the exposure  
±2 stops in 1/3-stop increments when using the flash.  
Select the flash exposure  
compensation.  
Press the m button and select  
press the m button again.  
, then  
Make the setting.  
Press the op buttons or turn the  dial  
to select the flash exposure  
compensation, then press the m button.  
In  
M
and  
B
shooting modes, set [Flash Mode] to [Auto] in advance (p. 97).  
You can also set the flash exposure compensation by pressing the  
n button. Select [Flash Settings] from the 4 tab, then press the  
m button. Use the qr buttons to make the setting.  
Setting the Flash Output  
You can select 3 levels of flash output.  
Set the camera to h (p. 70).  
Select the flash output.  
Press the m button and select  
press the m button again.  
, then  
Make the Setting.  
Press the op buttons or turn the  dial  
to select flash output, then press the m  
button.  
In M and B shooting modes, set [Flash Mode] to [Manual] in  
advance (p. 97).  
You can also set the flash output by pressing the n button. Select  
[Flash Settings] from the 4 tab, then press the m button. Use the qr  
buttons to make the setting.  
98  
     
Exposure Compensation When  
Shooting With A Flash (Safety FE)  
The camera automatically changes the shutter speed or aperture value  
when the flash fires to avoid overexposing and blowing out the highlights in  
the scene.  
Select [Flash Settings].  
Press the n button, select [Flash  
Settings] from the 4 tab and press the  
m button.  
Make the setting.  
Press the op buttons or turn the  dial  
to select [Safety FE], then press the qr  
buttons to select [On] or [Off].  
In M and B shooting modes, set [Flash Mode] to [Auto] in advance  
99  
 
Changing the Color and Shooting  
You can change the look of an image when shooting. However, the shooting  
conditions may cause the image to become coarse, or the colors may not  
come out as expected.  
T Color Accent  
You can select to retain a single color and change the rest to black and white  
in a composition.  
Select T.  
Follow Step 1 on p. 59 to select T.  
Press the l button.  
The unchanged image and the Color  
Accent image will both display.  
The color for default settings is green.  
Specify the color.  
Position the center frame so it is filled with  
the color you want and press the q button.  
X The specified color will be recorded.  
Specify the range of colors.  
Press the op buttons or turn the  
Â
dial  
to change the range of colors to be retained.  
Recorded color  
Select a negative value to limit the range  
of colors. Select a positive value to extend  
the range of colors to similar colors.  
Pressing the l button accepts the  
setting and restores the shooting screen.  
Using the flash may cause unexpected results in this mode.  
The recorded color will be saved even if you turn off the power.  
Y Color Swap  
You can swap one color in an image for another when recording it. You can  
only swap one color.  
100  
           
Changing the Color and Shooting  
Select Y.  
Follow Step 1 on p. 59 to select Y.  
Press the l button.  
The unchanged image and the Color  
Swap image will both display.  
The default setting is to change green to  
gray.  
Specify the color to be swapped.  
Position the center frame so it is filled with  
the color you want and press the q button.  
X The specified color will be recorded.  
Specify the target color.  
Position the center frame so it is filled with  
the color you want and press the r button.  
X The specified color will be recorded.  
Specify the range of colors to be  
swapped.  
Press the op buttons or turn the  
Â
dial  
to adjust the range of colors affected.  
Select a negative value to limit the range  
of colors. Select a positive value to extend  
the range of colors to similar colors.  
Pressing the l button accepts the  
setting and restores the shooting screen.  
101  
L Shooting Stitch Assist Images  
Using the flash may cause unexpected results in this mode.  
The recorded color and range of colors will be saved even if you turn off  
the power.  
Under some conditions, the image may appear coarse.  
L Shooting Stitch Assist Images  
Large subjects can be split into several shots that can later be merged together  
using the included software on a computer to create a panoramic image.  
Set the mode dial to K.  
Select the shooting mode.  
Follow Step 1 on p. 59 to select x or v.  
Take the first shot.  
X The exposure and white balance will be  
set with the first shot.  
Take subsequent shots.  
Overlap part of the first shot when taking  
the second shot.  
Minor discrepancies in the overlapping  
portions will be corrected when the  
images are merged.  
Up to 26 shots can be recorded with the  
same procedures.  
When you have finished taking shots,  
proceed to Step 5.  
Finish shooting.  
Press the m button.  
Merge the images on a computer.  
For details on how to merge the images,  
refer to the Software Starter Guide.  
This function is not available when a TV is used as the monitor (p. 81).  
102  
       
6
Using Various Functions for  
Shooting Movies  
This chapter provides more advanced information than the "E  
Shooting Movies" and "1 Viewing Movies" sections of Chapter 1.  
This chapter assumes that the mode dial is set to E.  
103  
 
Changing the Movie Mode  
You can select between three movie modes.  
Set the mode dial to E.  
Select a movie mode.  
Press the m button, then use the op  
buttons or turn the  dial to select E,  
then press the m button again.  
Press the op buttons or turn the  dial  
to select a shooting mode, then press the  
m button.  
E Standard  
Normal mode.  
These shooting modes let you change all colors except the selected  
color to black and white, or exchange the selected color for another  
color, when shooting. See “Changing the Color and Shooting”  
(p. 100) for details.  
> Color Accent  
z Color Swap  
Under some conditions, colors may not turn out as expected in the > and  
z mode.  
Changing the Image Quality  
You can select between three image quality settings.  
Select the image quality.  
Press the m button, then use the op  
buttons or turn the  dial to select  
,
then press the m button again.  
Select an option.  
Press the op buttons or turn the  dial  
to select an option, and press the m  
button.  
X The setting will display on the screen.  
104  
         
Changing the Image Quality  
Content  
Image Quality Table  
Image Quality  
(Recording Pixels/Frame Rate)  
1280 x 720 pixels, 30 frames/sec. For shooting high-definition movies.  
640 x 480 pixels, 30 frames/sec. For shooting standard quality movies.  
Since the number of the recording pixels is  
320 x 240 pixels, 30 frames/sec. smaller, the image quality will be lower than with  
, but you can record three times the length.  
Estimated Shooting Time  
Image Quality  
(Frame Rate)  
Shooting Time  
2 GB  
8 GB  
10 min. 53 sec.  
43 min. 32 sec.  
23 min. 49 sec.  
1 hr. 35 min. 11 sec.  
4 hrs. 52 min. 24 sec.  
1 hr. 13 min. 10 sec.  
Based on Canon’s testing standards.  
Maximum clip length is approximately 29 minutes and 59 seconds in  
and . Recording also stops when the file size reaches 4 GB.  
, 1 hour in  
Recording may stop even if the maximum clip length has not been reached on some  
memory cards. SD Speed Class 4 or higher memory cards are recommended.  
AE Lock/Exposure Shift  
You can set the exposure or change it in 1/3 steps within a range of ±2.  
Focus.  
Lock the exposure.  
Press the o button to lock the exposure.  
The exposure shift bar appears.  
Press the  
o
button again to release the lock.  
Change the exposure.  
While watching the screen, turn the   
dial to adjust the brightness.  
Shoot.  
105  
     
Other Shooting Functions  
The following functions can be used in the same way as for still images. For  
> and z modes, the functions with an * attached can be used in the same  
way as for still images.  
Zooming in More Closely on Subjects (Digital Zoom) (p. 63)  
You can use the digital zoom, but the optical zoom cannot be used.  
If you want to shoot at the maximum zoom factor, you should adjust the optical  
zoom to the maximum before shooting.  
The sound of the zoom will be recorded.  
Ò Using the Self-Timer (p. 66)*  
e Shooting Close-ups (Macro/Super Macro) (p. 71)*  
Super Macro is not available.  
Adjusting the White Balance (p. 75)  
Changing the Tone of an Image (My Colors) (p. 78)  
Î Shooting Using the Two Second Self-Timer (p. 79)*  
Shooting Using a TV Monitor (p. 81)*  
Shooting in Manual Focus Mode (p. 89)*  
¤ Shooting with the AE Lock (p. 90)*  
Turning off the AF Assist Beam (p. 143)*  
Displaying the Overlay (p. 144)*  
[3:2 Guide] is not available.  
Changing the IS-Mode Settings (p. 144)*  
You can switch between [Continuous] and [Off].  
Registering Functions to the c Button (p. 145)*  
Playback Functions  
The following functions can be used in the same way as for still images.  
/ Erasing Images (p. 28)  
Quickly Searching Images (p. 110)  
Viewing Images in Filtered Playback (p. 111)  
. Viewing Slideshows (p. 112)  
Changing Image Transitions (p. 115)  
Viewing Images on a TV (p. 116)  
/ Erasing All Images (p. 118)  
: Protecting Images (p. 121)  
; Organizing Images by Category (My Category) (p. 123)  
\ Rotating Images (p. 125)  
106  
   
Playback Functions  
Summary for “1 Viewing Movies” (p. 33)  
Exit  
Playback  
Slow Motion Playback (you can use the qr buttons to adjust the speed. Sound  
will not play back.)  
Display the first frame  
Previous frame (Rewind if you hold down the m button.)  
Next frame (Fast forward if you hold down the m button.)  
Display the last frame  
Displays when connected to a PictBridge compliant printer (p. 29).  
Refer to the Personal Printing Guide for details.  
* Editing  
You can trim the beginnings and ends of recorded movies in one-second  
increments.  
Select *.  
Follow Step 1 – 3 on p. 33, select * and  
press the m button.  
X The movie editing panel and the movie  
editing bar will display.  
Movie Editing Panel  
Set the editing range.  
Press the op buttons and select  
or  
.
Press the qr buttons or turn the  dial  
to move will display at each one-  
second interval. If you select , you can  
trim the beginning of the movie from . If  
, you can trim the end of the  
.
you select  
movie from  
.
Movie Editing Bar  
107  
     
* Editing  
X Even if you move to a point other than a  
point, only the portion from the  
nearest  
when  
to the left will be trimmed  
is selected. Only the portion  
from the nearest  
trimmed when  
to the right will be  
is selected.  
X The light blue section selected with will  
be the section of the movie that remains  
after editing.  
Check the edited movie.  
Press the op buttons to select  
, then  
press the m button. The edited movie will  
play.  
To edit the movie again, repeat Step 2.  
To cancel editing, press the op buttons,  
and select  
. After pressing the m  
button, press the qr buttons or turn the  
 dial to select [OK], and press the m  
button again.  
Save the edited movie.  
Press the op buttons to select  
press the m button.  
, then  
Press the qr buttons or turn the  dial  
to select [New File], then press the m  
button.  
X The movie will be saved as a new file.  
When [Overwrite] in Step 4 is selected, the unedited movie is overwritten  
with the edited movie, erasing the original movie.  
When there is not enough space left on the memory card, only  
[Overwrite] can be selected.  
If the battery is depleted partway through editing, the edited movie clips  
may not be saved. When editing movies, you should use a fully charged  
battery or the separately sold AC adapter kit (p. 40).  
108  
7
Using Playback and Other  
Functions  
The first part of this chapter explains various ways to play back and  
edit images. The latter part explains how to specify images for printing.  
Press the 1 button to select the Playback mode before operating the  
camera.  
It may not be possible to play back or edit images that have been edited  
on a computer, had their file name changed, or have been taken on a  
different camera.  
The edit function (pp. 125 130) cannot be used if the memory card  
does not have free space available.  
109  
 
Quickly Searching Images  
g Searching Images Using Index Display  
Displaying multiple images at a time lets you quickly find the image you want.  
Select Images.  
X Images will display in an index.  
Move the zoom lever toward g to  
increase the number of images. The  
number of images increases each time  
you move the lever.  
Move the zoom lever toward k to reduce  
the number of images. The number of  
images will reduce each time you move  
the lever.  
Change the displayed images.  
Turn the  dial to switch to the next set  
of images set in Step 1.  
Select an image.  
Press the opqr buttons to select an image.  
An orange frame appears on the selected  
image.  
Press the m button to display the  
selected image by itself.  
Searching Images Using the Control Dial  
Turn the control dial to quickly search images. You can also jump by the  
shooting date.  
Select an image.  
If you set the single image playback and  
turn the  dial quickly, the images will  
display as shown on the left.  
If you press the op buttons, you can  
search images by the shooting date.  
Pressing the m button restores the single  
image playback.  
110  
   
Viewing Images in Filtered Playback  
When there are many images on the memory card, you can filter and display  
them by a specified condition. You can also delete (p. 118) or protect  
(p. 121) all images at once in the filtered condition.  
Select .  
Press the m button to select in the  
FUNC. menu, then press the m button  
again.  
Select a condition.  
Press the op buttons or turn the  dial  
to select a condition, then press the m  
button.  
View the filtered images.  
Press the op buttons or turn the  dial  
to select a condition for playback, then  
press the m button.  
X Filtered playback starts and a yellow  
frame displays.  
If you press the qr buttons or turn the  
 dial, only the images selected in Step  
1 will display.  
If you select [All Images] in Step 2, filtered  
playback will be canceled.  
Search by  
, ;,  
and  
Shot Date  
Displays the images shot on the specified date  
Displays the images of the specified category  
Displays the images in a specified folder  
Displays only still images or movies  
My Category  
;
Folder  
File Type  
What if you can’t select a target?  
Conditions containing no images cannot be selected.  
111  
     
. Viewing Slideshows  
Filtered Playback  
You can use the following functions in filtered playback for processing the filtered  
images at once.  
/ Erasing All Images” (p. 118) . Viewing Slideshows” (p. 112) :  
,
,
Protecting Images” (p. 121) “Printing from the Print List (DPOF)” (p. 131)  
,
. Viewing Slideshows  
You can automatically play back images recorded to a memory card. Each  
image displays for approximately 3 seconds.  
Select ..  
Press the m button to select . in the  
FUNC. menu, then press the m button  
again.  
X The slideshow will start a few seconds  
after [Loading image…] displays.  
In filtered playback (p. 111), only images  
in a filtered condition play back.  
You can pause/restart a slideshow by  
pressing the m button again.  
Press the n button to stop the  
slideshow.  
If you press the qr buttons or turn the  dial during playback, the  
image will switch. If you press and hold down the qr buttons you can  
fast-forward through images.  
The power saving function does not work during slideshows (p. 53).  
112  
     
. Viewing Slideshows  
Changing Settings  
You can change the time that slideshow images are displayed, transition  
effects and set the slideshow to repeat. You can select from seven transition  
effects when switching between images.  
Select [Slideshow].  
Press the n button, select  
[Slideshow] from the 1 tab and press the  
m button.  
Make the setting.  
Press the op buttons or turn the  dial  
to select an item, and press the qr  
buttons to adjust the setting.  
If you select [Start] and press the m  
button, the slideshow starts with your  
settings.  
Pressing the n button will restore the  
menu screen.  
113  
Checking the Focus  
You can magnify the area of a recorded image that was inside the AF frame  
or the area of a face that was detected to check the focus.  
Press the  
to the focus check display (p. 45).  
l
button, and switch  
X
A white frame will appear where the AF  
frame or face was when the focus was set.  
X A gray frame will appear on a face  
detected during playback.  
X The area within the orange frame appears  
magnified.  
Change the magnification level or  
location.  
Move the zoom lever toward k once.  
X
Use the zoom lever to change the display  
size, and the opqr buttons to change the  
display position while checking the focus.  
Switch frames.  
Pressing the m button will switch to a  
different frame.  
Pressing the n button resets the  
display to Step 1.  
114  
   
k Magnifying Images  
Move the zoom lever toward k.  
The display will zoom in on the image and,  
if you continue to hold the zoom lever, it  
will continue to zoom in up to a factor of  
10x.  
If you press the opqr buttons, you can  
move the location of the displayed area.  
Move the zoom lever toward g to zoom  
out or return to Single Image Playback.  
If you turn the  dial, you can switch  
images in the zoomed state.  
ApproximateLocation  
of Displayed Area  
Changing Image Transitions  
You can select from three transition effects when switching between images  
in single image playback.  
Select [Transition].  
Press the n button and select the 1  
tab, then select [Transition] and use the  
qr buttons to select a transition effect.  
Press the n button to accept the  
setting.  
115  
       
Viewing Images on a TV  
Using the supplied AV cable, you can connect the camera to a TV to view  
images you have shot.  
Items to Prepare  
Camera and TV  
AV cable supplied with the camera (p. 2)  
Turn off the camera and TV.  
Connect the camera to the TV.  
Open the camera’s terminal cover and  
fully insert the plug of the cable into the  
camera’s terminal.  
Insert the cable plug fully into the video  
input terminals as shown in the illustration.  
White or black  
Yellow  
Turn on the TV and switch it to the  
input to which the cable is  
connected.  
Yellow  
Black  
Turn on the camera.  
Press the 1 button to turn on the camera.  
X The image will appear on the TV (nothing  
will appear on the monitor of the camera).  
After you finish viewing, turn off the  
camera and TV, and unplug the AV cable.  
What if the images don’t properly display on the TV?  
Images will not display correctly if the camera’s video output setting (NTSC/PAL)  
does not match the TV system. Press the n button, select the 3 tab and  
[Video System] to switch to the correct video system.  
116  
         
Viewing Images on a High-Definition TV  
Use the separately sold HDMI cable HTC-100 to connect the camera with a  
high-definition TV for enhanced viewing experience.  
Turn on the camera and TV.  
Connect the camera to the TV.  
Open the cover and fully insert the cable  
plug into the camera's HDMI mini terminal.  
Fully insert the cable plug into the TV's  
HDMI terminal.  
Follow Steps 3-4 on p. 116 to display the  
images.  
The supplied AV cable and the separately sold HDMI cable HTC-100  
cannot be plugged into the camera simultaneously. This could cause the  
camera to malfunction.  
117  
 
/ Erasing All Images  
You can select images and erase them in groups. Since erased images  
cannot be recovered, exercise adequate caution before erasing. Protected  
images (p. 121) cannot be erased.  
Select [Erase].  
Press the n button, select the 1 tab  
and [Erase], and press the m button.  
Select a selection method.  
Press the op buttons or turn the   
dial, select a selection method, and press  
the m button.  
Pressing the n button will restore the  
menu screen.  
Selecting Images Individually  
Select [Select].  
Follow Step 2 above to select [Select] and  
press the m button.  
Select images.  
Press the qr buttons or turn the  dial,  
select the image and press the m button.  
X Once set,  
will appear on the screen.  
Pressing the m button once more will  
cancel the selection, and  
disappear.  
will  
To select multiple images, repeat the  
above operation.  
118  
       
/ Erasing All Images  
Press the n button.  
Erase.  
Press the qr buttons or turn the  dial,  
select [OK] and press the m button.  
Select Range  
Select [Select Range].  
Follow Step 2 on p. 118 to select [Select  
Range] and press the m button.  
Select the starting image.  
Press the m button.  
Press the qr buttons or turn the  dial,  
select the image and press the m button.  
Select the ending image.  
Press the r button, select [Last image]  
and press the m button.  
You cannot select images before the first  
image.  
Press the qr buttons, or turn the  dial  
to select an image, and press the m  
button.  
119  
   
/ Erasing All Images  
Erase.  
Press the p button to select [Erase], then  
press the m button.  
Select images with the  dial  
You can also select the first or last image by turning the  dial when the upper  
screen in Steps 2 and 3 is displayed.  
Select All Images  
Select [All Images].  
Follow Step 2 on p. 118 to select [All  
Images] and press the m button.  
Erase.  
Press the qr buttons or turn the  dial,  
select [OK] and press the m button.  
120  
: Protecting Images  
You can protect important images so that they cannot be erased by the  
camera (pp. 28, 118).  
Select :.  
Press the m button to select : in the  
FUNC. menu, then press the m button  
again.  
Make the setting.  
Press the qr buttons or turn the  dial,  
select [Protect] and press the m button.  
X Once set,  
will appear on the screen.  
If you format the memory card (p. 52), protected images will also be  
erased.  
Protected images cannot be erased with the camera’s erase function. To  
erase an image, cancel protection first.  
You can also protect images using the following method. Press the  
n button, select the 1 tab, select [Protect]. Press the m button to  
select [Select] and press the m button again, then press the qr  
buttons to select an image and press the m button.  
Select Range  
Select [Protect].  
Press the n button, select the 1 tab  
and [Protect], and then press the m  
button.  
Select [Select Range].  
Press the op buttons or turn the   
dial, select [Select Range] and press the  
m button.  
Follow Steps 2 and 3 on p. 119 to select  
images.  
121  
         
: Protecting Images  
Protect images.  
Press the p button, select [Protect] and  
press the m button.  
Select All Images  
Select [All Images].  
Follow Step 2 on p. 121 to select [All  
Images] and press the m button.  
Protect images.  
Press the op buttons or turn the  
select [Protect] and press the  
Â
dial,  
button.  
m
You can unlock groups of protected images if you select [Unlock] in Step  
2, while in [Select Range] or [All Images].  
122  
; Organizing Images by Category  
(My Category)  
You can organize images in categories. You can display the images in a  
category in the Filtered Playback (p. 111) and process all images at once by  
using the functions below.  
Viewing Slideshows (p. 112), Erasing All Images (p. 118), Protecting  
Images (p. 121), Selecting Images for Printing (DPOF) (p. 133)  
Select ;.  
Press the m button to select ; in the  
FUNC. menu, then press the m button  
again.  
Make the setting.  
Press the op buttons to select a  
category, then press the m button.  
Once set,  
will appear on the screen.  
Using the Menu  
Select [My Category].  
Press the n button, select the 1 tab  
and [My Category], and press the m  
button.  
Select a selection method.  
Press the op buttons or turn the   
dial, select a selection method and press  
the m button.  
Pressing the n button will restore the  
menu screen.  
123  
     
; Organizing Images by Category (My Category)  
Selecting Images Individually  
Select [Select].  
Follow Step 2 above to select [Select] and  
press the m button.  
Follow Step 2 on p. 118 to select images.  
Press the op buttons, select a category  
and press the m button.  
X Once set,  
Pressing the m button again deselects  
the category and disappears.  
will appear on the screen.  
To select multiple images, repeat the  
above operation.  
Select Range  
Select [Select Range].  
Follow Step 2 on p. 123 to select [Select  
Range] and press the m button.  
Follow Steps 2 and 3 on p. 119 to select  
images.  
Press the p button, select the item and  
press the qr buttons, or turn the  dial,  
and select a type.  
Select the setting.  
Press the p button to select [Select] and  
press the m button.  
If you select [Deselect] in Step 2, you can deselect all of the images in the  
[Select Range] category.  
124  
 
\ Rotating Images  
You can change the orientation of an image and save it. Movies with a  
resolution of  
cannot be rotated.  
Select \.  
Press the m button to select \ in the  
FUNC. menu, then press the m button  
again.  
Make the setting.  
Press the qr buttons to select the  
direction, then press the m button.  
X The image will rotate 90° in the selected  
direction.  
Pressing the n button will restore the  
menu screen.  
Using the Menu  
Select [Rotate].  
Press the n button, select the 1 tab  
and [Rotate], and press the m button.  
Rotate the image.  
Press the qr buttons or turn the  dial  
to select an image.  
The image will rotate 90° with each press  
of the m button.  
If you want to rotate multiple images, press  
the qr buttons or turn the dial, select  
an image and repeat the operations above.  
Â
Pressing the n button will restore the  
menu screen.  
125  
     
= Resizing Images  
You can resize images to a lower pixel setting and save the resized image  
as a separate file.  
Select [Resize].  
Press the n button and select the 1  
tab, then select [Resize] and press the m  
button.  
Select an image.  
Press the qr buttons or turn the  dial,  
select the image and press the m button.  
Select an image size.  
Press the qr buttons or turn the  dial  
to select an option, then press the m  
button.  
X The [Save new image?] screen will  
appear.  
Save the new image.  
Press the qr buttons or turn the  dial  
to select [OK] and press the m button.  
X The image will be saved as a new file.  
Display the new image.  
When you press the n button, the  
[Display new image?] screen will appear.  
If you press the qr buttons, or turn the  
 dial to select [Yes] and press the m  
button, the saved image will display.  
You cannot resize an image to a larger size.  
You cannot resize images taken with the  
and  
settings.  
126  
     
[ Trimming  
You can cut out a portion of a recorded image and save it as a new image file.  
Select [Trimming].  
Press the n button, select the 1  
tab and [Trimming], then press the m  
button.  
Select an image.  
Press the qr buttons or turn the  dial,  
select the image and press the m button.  
Trimming Area  
Adjust the trimming area.  
X A frame will appear around the portion of  
the image to be trimmed.  
X The original image will display in the upper  
left and the trimmed image will display in  
the lower right.  
If you move the zoom lever to the left or  
right, you can change the frame size.  
If you press the opqr buttons, you can  
Trimming Area Display  
move the frame.  
If you press the l button, you can  
change the frame size.  
Recorded pixels  
after trimming  
In an image with detected faces, gray  
frames appear around the faces located in  
the upper left image. The frames can be  
used for trimming. You can switch  
between frames by turning the  dial.  
Press the m button, use the qr buttons  
or turn the  dial to select [OK], then  
press the m button again.  
Save as a new image and display.  
Perform Steps 4 and 5 on p. 126.  
127  
   
,
, and  
images cannot be trimmed.  
The width and height ratio of an image that can be changed is fixed at  
4:3 (for a vertical image 3:4).  
The number of recorded pixels in a trimmed image will be smaller than  
before trimming.  
? Adding Effects with the My Colors  
Function  
You can change the color of an image and save it as a separate image.  
Refer to p. 78 for details on each menu item.  
Select [My Colors].  
Press the n button, select the 1 tab  
and [My Colors], and press the m button.  
Select an image.  
Press the qr buttons or turn the  dial,  
select the image and press the m button.  
Select a menu option.  
Press the qr buttons or turn the  dial  
to select an option, then press the m  
button.  
After selecting the menu option, you can  
zoom the image by following the  
operations in “k Magnifying Images”  
If you press the m button during  
magnified display, you can switch to the  
original image. Pressing the n button  
restores the menu screen.  
Save as a new image and display.  
Perform Steps 4 and 5 on p. 126.  
If you repeatedly change the color of an image, the quality will gradually  
deteriorate and you may not achieve the expected color.  
The coloration of images changed with this function may vary from those  
recorded with the My Colors function (p. 78).  
128  
   
@ Making Dark Subjects Appear  
Brighter (i-Contrast)  
Detects and compensates for dark sections of subjects or people’s faces  
and saves the image as a separate file. You can select 4 levels of correction:  
[Auto], [Low], [Medium] or [High].  
Select [i-Contrast].  
Press the n button, select the 1 tab  
and [i-Contrast], then press the m button.  
Select an image.  
Press the qr buttons or turn the  dial,  
select the image and press the m button.  
Select a menu item.  
Press the qr buttons or turn the  dial  
to select an option, then press the m  
button.  
Save as a new image and display.  
Perform Steps 4 and 5 on p. 126.  
What if the image wasn’t corrected by the [Auto] option as  
well as you would like?  
Select [Low], [Medium] or [High] and adjust the image.  
Under some conditions, the image may appear coarse or the exposure  
setting may not be suitable.  
Repeatedly adjusting the same image may cause the quality to  
deteriorate.  
129  
   
] Correcting the Red-Eye Effect  
You can automatically correct red eyes in images and save them as new  
files.  
Select [Red-Eye Correction].  
Press the n button, select the 1 tab  
and [Red-Eye Correction], then press the  
m button.  
X The [Red-Eye Correction] screen will  
appear.  
Select an image.  
Press the qr buttons or turn the  dial  
to select an image.  
You can zoom the image using the  
procedures in “k Magnifying Images”  
Correct the image.  
Press the m button.  
X Red-eye detected by the camera will be  
corrected and a frame will appear around  
the corrected portion.  
You can zoom the image using the  
procedures in “k Magnifying Images”  
Save as a new image and display.  
Press the opqr buttons, or turn the   
dial to select [New File], and press the m  
button.  
X The image will be saved as a new file.  
Perform Step 5 on p. 126.  
Some images may not be properly corrected.  
When [Overwrite] in Step 4 is selected, the uncorrected image is  
overwritten with the corrected data, erasing the original image.  
Protected images cannot be overwritten.  
130  
     
Printing from the Print List (DPOF)  
You can add images to the print list (DPOF) directly after shooting or while in  
playback by pressing the c button. You can print from a print list simply by  
connecting your camera and printer. These selection methods comply with  
the DPOF (Digital Print Order Format) standards.  
Easily Add Images to the Print List  
Select an image.  
Press the qr buttons or turn the  dial  
and select the image.  
Press the c button (videos will be  
excluded).  
Print list.  
Press the op buttons and select the  
number of prints, press the qr buttons or  
turn the  dial, select [Add] and press  
the m button.  
To cancel adding images, select the  
added images and press the c button,  
then press the qr buttons, or turn the   
dial, select [Remove] and press the m  
button.  
131  
     
Printing from the Print List (DPOF)  
Print Added Images  
The following examples use the Canon SELPHY series printers. Please also  
refer to the Personal Printing Guide.  
Number of copies to print  
Connect the camera to the printer  
Print.  
Press the op buttons, select [Print now]  
and press the m button.  
X Printing will start.  
If you stop the printer during printing and  
start again, it will start from the next print.  
132  
Selecting Images for Printing (DPOF)  
You can select certain images on a memory card for printing (up to 998  
images) and specify the number of print copies so they can be printed  
together or processed at a photo developer service. You can then print all  
the selected images at once or take the memory card to a photo developer  
to order prints. These selection methods comply with the DPOF (Digital Print  
Order Format) standards.  
Print Settings  
You can set the print type, date and file number. These settings apply to all  
images selected for printing.  
Select [Print Settings].  
Press the n button and select the 2  
tab, then select [Print Settings] and press  
the m button.  
Adjust the settings.  
Press the op buttons or turn the  dial  
to select a menu item, then press the qr  
buttons to select an option.  
X Pressing the n button accepts the  
settings and restores the menu screen.  
Standard Prints one image per page.  
Print Type  
Index  
Both  
On  
Prints several reduced size images per page.  
Prints both standard and index formats.  
Prints the date from the shooting information.  
Date  
File No.  
Off  
On  
Prints the file number.  
Off  
On  
Removes all print settings after printing.  
Clear DPOF data  
Off  
Some printers or photo developer services may not be able to reflect all  
of the print settings in the output.  
may display when using a memory card with print settings set by a  
different camera. These settings will be overwritten by those set by your  
camera.  
Images with the date embedded always print with the date, regardless of  
the [Date] setting. As a result, some printers may print the date twice on  
these images if [Date] is also set to [On].  
133  
       
Selecting Images for Printing (DPOF)  
With [Index] selected, the [Date] and [File No.] options cannot be set to  
[On] at the same time.  
The date will be printed in the style set in the [Date/Time] function in the  
3 tab (p. 19).  
Selecting the Number of Copies  
Select [Select Images & Qty.].  
Press the n button and select the 2  
tab, then select [Select Images & Qty.]  
and press the m button.  
Select an image.  
Press the qr buttons or turn the  dial  
to select an image, then press the m  
button.  
X You will be able to set the number of print  
copies.  
If you select [Index],  
appears on the  
screen.  
Press the m button again to deselect the  
images. will disappear.  
Set the number of prints.  
Press the op buttons or turn the  dial  
to set the number of prints (maximum 99).  
Repeat Steps 2 and 3 to select other  
images and the number of prints for each.  
You cannot set the number of print copies  
for Index prints. You can only select which  
images to print.  
X Pressing the n button accepts the  
settings and restores the menu screen.  
134  
   
Selecting Images for Printing (DPOF)  
Select Range  
Select [Select Range].  
Select [Select Range] in Step 1 on p. 134  
and press the m button.  
Select images according to Steps 2 and 3  
on p. 119.  
Make print settings.  
Press the op buttons, select [Order] and  
press the m button.  
Set All Images to Print Once  
Select [Select All Images].  
Select [Select All Images] from the screen  
in Step 1 on p. 134 and press the m  
button.  
Make print settings.  
Press the qr buttons or turn the  dial,  
select [OK] and press the m button.  
Clearing All Selections  
Select [Clear All Selections].  
Select [Clear All Selections] in Step 1 on  
p. 134, and press the m button.  
Press the qr buttons or turn the  dial  
to select [OK], then press the m button.  
X All selections will be cleared.  
135  
     
136  
8
Customizing the Camera  
You can customize various functions to suit your shooting  
preferences. The first part of this chapter explains convenient and  
commonly used functions. The latter part explains how to change  
shooting and playback settings to suit your purposes.  
137  
 
Changing Functions  
You can customize convenient and commonly used functions from the 3  
tab (p. 48).  
Turning off the Power Saving Function  
You can set the power saving function (p. 53) to [Off]. Setting it to [On] is  
recommended to save battery power.  
Select [Power Saving], then press the m  
button.  
Press the op buttons or turn the  dial to  
select [Auto Power Down], then use the qr  
buttons to select [Off].  
If you set the Power Saving function to [Off],  
be careful not to forget to turn off the camera  
after use.  
Setting the Screen Shut-Off Time  
You can adjust the time the screen takes to shut off automatically (p. 53).  
This also works when [Auto Power Down] is set to [Off].  
Select [Power Saving], then press the m  
button.  
Press the op buttons or turn the  dial to  
select [Display Off], then use the qr buttons  
to select a time.  
In order to save battery power, it is  
recommended to select less than [1 min.].  
138  
     
Changing Functions  
Using the World Clock  
When traveling abroad, you can record images with local dates and times simply  
by switching the time zone setting if you pre-register the destination time zones.  
You can enjoy the convenience of not having to switch the Date/Time settings.  
Set the home time zone.  
Select [Time Zone] and press the m  
button.  
When setting this for the first time, confirm  
the information that displays on the screen  
at the left, and press the m button.  
Press the qr buttons or turn the  dial  
to select the home time zone, then press  
the m button. To set daylight saving time  
(adds 1 hour), press the op buttons to  
select  
.
Set the world time zone.  
Press the op buttons or turn the  dial  
to select  
, then press the m button.  
Press the qr buttons or turn the  dial  
to select the destination time zone, then  
press the m button.  
You can also set the daylight saving time  
as in Step 1.  
Select the world time zone.  
Press the op buttons or turn the  
to select [Home/World].  
Â
dial  
Press the qr buttons to select  
press the button.  
, then  
n
will appear in the [Time Zone] or  
shooting screen (p. 44).  
If you change the date or time in the  
and date will automatically change.  
setting, (p. 19), your  
time  
139  
     
Changing Functions  
Turning off Hints & Tips  
When you select an item in the FUNC. menu or when using the opqr  
buttons, hints and tips display. You can turn off this function.  
Select [Hints & Tips], then press the qr  
buttons to select [Off].  
Changing the File Number Assignment  
Images you shoot are automatically assigned file numbers in the order they  
were taken, from 0001 – 9999, and saved to folders of up to 2,000 images.  
You can change the file number assignment.  
Select [File Numbering], then press the qr  
buttons to select an option.  
Even if you shoot using a new memory  
card, the file numbers are assigned  
consecutively until an image with the  
Continuous  
number 9999 is taken/saved.  
If you replace the memory card with a  
Auto Reset new one, file numbering begins with  
0001 again.  
If you use a memory card already containing images, the newly  
assigned file numbers may continue the existing numbering for both the  
[Continuous] and [Auto Reset] settings. If you want to start over with file  
number 0001, format the memory card before use (p. 52).  
Refer to the Software Starter Guide for information regarding folder  
structure or image types.  
140  
     
Changing Functions  
Creating a Folder  
You can create new folders in which to save images.  
Select [Create Folder], then press the m  
button.  
Select [Create New Folder], then press the  
qr buttons to select  
.
Newly shot images are now saved to the new  
folder.  
Creating Folders by Day and Time  
You can set a day and time for folder creation.  
Select [Create Folder], then press the m  
button.  
Select [Auto Create], then press the qr  
buttons to select an interval.  
Select [Time], then press the qr buttons to  
set a time.  
The new folder will be created on the set day  
and time. Images shot after the creation date  
are saved to the new folder.  
Turning off Auto Rotate  
When you play back images on the camera or a computer, images shot in  
vertical orientation automatically rotate and display vertically. You can turn  
off this function.  
Select [Auto Rotate], then press the qr  
buttons to select [Off].  
141  
   
Changing Shooting Functions  
Changing the Lens Retract Time  
For safety reasons, the lens retracts about 1 minute after pressing the 1  
button when in a shooting mode (p. 53). You can set the retraction time to  
[0 sec.].  
Select [Lens Retract], then press the qr  
buttons to select [0 sec.].  
Changing Shooting Functions  
If you set the mode dial to G, you can change the settings in the 4 tab  
Before attempting to shoot using a function explained in this chapter in  
modes other than G mode, check if the function is available in those  
modes (pp. 156 159).  
Turning off the Red-Eye Reduction Function  
The red-eye reduction lamp lights in order to reduce the red-eye effect that  
occurs when shooting in dark conditions with the flash. You can turn off this  
function.  
Select [Flash Settings], then press the m  
button.  
Press the op buttons or turn the  dial to  
select [Red-Eye Lamp], then press the qr  
buttons to select [Off].  
142  
         
Changing Shooting Functions  
Turning off the AF Assist Beam  
The lamp will automatically light to assist focusing in low light conditions  
when you press the shutter button halfway. You can turn off the lamp.  
Select [AF-assist Beam], then press the qr  
buttons to select [Off].  
Changing the Image Display Time  
You can change the length of time the images display directly after shooting.  
Select [Review], then press the qr buttons to  
select an option.  
Off  
No image displays  
The image displays until you press the  
shutter button halfway.  
Hold  
Changing the Image Display Right After  
Shooting  
You can change the image display that appears after shooting.  
Select [Review Info], then press the qr  
buttons to select an option.  
Detailed  
Displays detailed information (p. 45).  
The area inside the AF frame is  
magnified, allowing you to check the  
focus. The procedure is the same as in  
“Checking the Focus” (p. 114).  
Focus Check  
143  
       
Changing Shooting Functions  
Displaying the Overlay  
You can display gridlines for vertical and horizontal guidance, or a 3:2 guide  
to confirm the printable area for postcard size prints.  
Select [Disp. Overlay], then press the qr  
buttons to select an option.  
Grid Lines  
3:2 Guide  
A grid overlays the display.  
The areas outside the 3:2 range are  
grayed out. This area will not print  
when printing on paper with a 3:2  
aspect ratio.  
Both grid lines, and the 3:2 guide will  
display.  
Both  
In  
mode, you cannot set [3:2 Guide] or [Both].  
Grid Lines will not be recorded on the image.  
The gray areas displayed with [3:2 Guide] are the areas that will not be  
printed. The actual image recorded will include the portion in the gray  
areas.  
Changing the IS-Mode Settings  
Select [IS Mode], then press the qr buttons to  
select an option.  
Image stabilization is always on. You can  
confirm the result directly on the display,  
which makes it easier to check the  
Continuous  
composition or focus.  
Image stabilization is only active at the  
Shoot Only  
moment of shooting.  
Image stabilization only counters up and  
down motion. This option is  
recommended for shooting objects  
Panning  
moving horizontally.  
144  
         
Changing Shooting Functions  
If camera shake is too strong, attach the camera to a tripod. It is  
recommended to set the IS Mode to [Off] when the camera is fixed to a  
tripod.  
When using [Panning], hold the camera horizontally. Image stabilization  
does not work when the camera is held vertically.  
Registering Functions to the c Button  
Select [Set c button], then press the m  
button.  
Press the opqr buttons or turn the  dial  
to select the functions to register, then press  
the m button.  
Pressing the c button will call up the  
registered function.  
Press  
When this  
if you want to cancel a function.  
symbol is shown on the bottom right of an icon, the  
function cannot be used in the current shooting mode or function setting.  
In  
, each press of the c button records white balance data (p. 75),  
and the white balance settings also change to  
.
145  
     
Changing Playback Functions  
You can adjust the settings in the 1 tab by pressing the 1 button (p. 48).  
Selecting the Image that First Displays  
in Playback  
Select [Resume], then press the qr buttons  
to select an option.  
Resumes with the most recently shot  
Last shot  
image.  
Last seen Resumes with the image last viewed.  
Changing the Start-up Image or Sound  
In the 3 tab, you can set one of your recorded images as the start-up image  
when the camera power is turned on, or change the sounds played for each  
camera operation with your recorded sounds.  
Change Sounds  
Select [Sound Options], then press the m  
button.  
Press the op buttons or turn the  dial to  
select an option.  
Press the qr buttons to select a setting.  
1
Preset sounds.  
You can register your sounds using the supplied  
software (ZoomBrowser EX/ImageBrowser) (p. 147).  
2
Changing the Start-up Screen  
Select [Start-up Image], then press the m  
button.  
Press the qr buttons to select a setting.  
No start-up image.  
1
2
Preset images.  
You can register your images.  
146  
           
Changing the Start-up Image or Sound  
Register the Start-up Screen  
When you press the 1 button and set the camera to playback mode, you  
can register sounds and images.  
Select [Start-up Image], then press the m  
button.  
Press the qr buttons to select [2], then press  
the m button.  
Press the qr buttons or turn the  dial to  
select an image, then press the m button.  
Press the qr buttons or turn the  dial to  
select [OK], then press the m button to  
complete registration.  
Register images or sounds saved on a computer  
You can register images or sounds to the camera using the included software  
(ZoomBrowser EX / ImageBrowser). Refer to the Software Starter Guide for  
details.  
Any previously registered start-up image will be overwritten when  
registering a new start-up image.  
147  
   
148  
9
Useful Information  
This chapter introduces how to use the AC adapter kit (sold  
separately), troubleshooting tips and contains lists of functions.  
The index also appears at the end.  
149  
 
Using Household Power  
If you use AC Adapter Kit ACK-DC30 (sold separately), you can use the  
camera without worrying about how much charge is left in the battery.  
Insert the coupler.  
Open the cover (p. 16) and insert the  
coupler as shown until it locks into place  
with a click.  
Close the cover (p. 16).  
Plug the cord into the coupler.  
Open the cover and fully insert the plug  
into the coupler.  
Connect the power cord.  
Connect the power cord to the compact  
power adapter, then plug the other end  
into a power outlet.  
You can turn the camera on to use it.  
After you finish, turn off the camera and  
unplug the power cord from the power outlet.  
The battery charger can also be used when abroad.  
The charger can be used in regions that have 100 - 240 V (50/60 Hz) AC power.  
If the plug does not fit the outlet, use a commercially available plug adapter. Do  
not use devices such as electrical transformers for foreign travel because they  
will cause malfunctions.  
Do not unplug the plug and power cord with the camera turned on. This  
could erase images you have taken or damage the camera.  
150  
     
Troubleshooting  
If you think there is a problem with the camera, first check the following. If  
the items below do not solve your problem, contact a Canon Customer  
Support Help Desk as listed on the included customer support list.  
Power  
You pressed the power button, but nothing happened.  
Confirm that the battery is properly inserted (p. 16).  
Confirm that the memory card/battery cover is securely closed (p. 16).  
If the battery terminals are dirty, battery performance will decrease. Clean the  
terminals with a cotton swab and re-insert the battery several times.  
Battery is consumed quickly.  
Battery performance decreases at low temperatures. Warm the battery by such  
methods as placing them in your pocket with the terminal cover on.  
Lens will not retract.  
Do not open the memory card/battery cover while the power is on. After closing  
the memory card/battery cover, turn the power on then back off (p. 17).  
TV output  
Image is distorted or not showing on TV (p. 116).  
Shooting  
Cannot shoot.  
Set the mode dial to the desired shooting mode (p. 42).  
When in playback mode (p. 27), press the shutter button halfway (p. 23).  
Camera screen is black at start-up.  
Images that have been edited on a computer, have had their file name changed,  
or that have been shot on another camera may not display properly if set as a  
start-up screen.  
Screen does not display properly in dark places (p. 46).  
Screen does not display properly while shooting.  
Please note, the following will not be recorded in still images, but will be recorded  
in movies.  
When the camera is subjected to powerful light sources, the display may  
darken.  
Under fluorescent lighting, the screen may flicker.  
When shooting bright light sources, a bar of light (purplish red) may appear on  
the screen.  
The h icon blinks when you try to shoot (p. 26).  
h appears on the screen and the shot cannot be taken even  
though the shutter button was pressed fully (p. 26).  
151  
 
Troubleshooting  
appears when the shutter button was pressed halfway (p. 62).  
Set the [IS mode] to [Continuous] (p. 144).  
Set the flash to h (p. 70).  
Increase the ISO speed (p. 74).  
Attach the camera to a tripod.  
Image is blurred.  
Shoot the subject within the focusing distance (p. 163).  
Set the [AF-assist Beam] to [On] (p. 143).  
Confirm that functions which you do not intend to use (macro, etc.) are not set.  
Shoot using the focus lock or AF lock (pp. 81, 86).  
Even when you press the shutter button halfway, the frame does  
not appear, and the camera does not focus.  
If you center on the light and dark contrasting area of the subject and push the  
shutter button halfway, or repeatedly push the shutter button halfway, the frame  
will appear and the camera will focus.  
Subject is too dark.  
Set the flash to h (p. 70).  
Adjust the brightness with exposure compensation (p. 76).  
Adjust the brightness with the i-Contrast function (pp. 95, 129).  
Use the AE lock, or spot metering to shoot (p. 90).  
Subject is too bright (overexposed).  
Set the flash to ! (p. 62).  
Adjust the brightness with exposure compensation (p. 76).  
Use the AE lock, or spot metering to shoot (p. 90).  
The subject is too bright due to ambient lighting.  
Image is dark even though the flash fired (p. 25).  
Increase the ISO speed (p. 74).  
Shoot within an appropriate distance for flash photography (p. 70).  
Image taken using the flash is too bright (overexposed).  
Shoot within an appropriate distance for flash photography (p. 70).  
Set the flash to ! (p. 62).  
White dots appear on the image when shooting with the flash.  
Light from the flash has reflected off dust particles or other objects in the air.  
Image appears rough or grainy.  
Shoot with the ISO speed on a lower setting (p. 74).  
Depending on the shooting mode, when shooting in a high ISO speed the image  
may appear rough or grainy (pp. 59, 61).  
Eyes appear red (p. 96).  
Set the [Red-Eye Lamp] to [On] (p. 142). When shooting with the flash, the lamp  
(on the front of the camera) lights (p. 42), and for approximately 1 second while  
the camera is reducing red-eye, it is not possible to shoot. It is more effective if  
152  
Troubleshooting  
the subject is looking directly at the lamp. Even better results can be obtained by  
increasing the lighting in indoor settings or approaching closer to the subject.  
Recording images to the memory card takes a long time, or  
continuous shooting slows down.  
Perform a low-level format of the memory card in the camera (p. 52)  
When you can’t make settings for shooting functions or FUNC. menu.  
The items in which settings can be made differ depending on the shooting  
mode. Refer to “Functions Available in Each Shooting Mode” (p. 156).  
Cannot operate buttons.  
When the mode dial is set to 9, some buttons cannot be used (p. 57).  
Lens flare is recorded in an image (ghost).  
When strong light enters the lens it may be recorded in the image. Change the  
camera angle or hold your hand to shield the strong light. When shooting night  
scenes, setting the camera to Tv mode and adjusting the shutter speed or ISO  
speed may solve the problem.  
Shooting movies  
Correct shooting time does not display, or stops.  
Format the memory card in the camera, or use a memory card capable of  
recording at high speeds. Even when the shooting time does not display  
properly, the video recorded will be the length that it was actually shot (p. 32).  
displayed on the LCD monitor, and shooting ended  
automatically.  
Camera’s internal memory was insufficient. Try one of the following.  
Perform a low-level format of the memory card in the camera (p. 52).  
Lower the recorded pixels (p. 105).  
Use a memory card capable of recording at high speeds.  
Playback  
Cannot play back images or movies.  
If the file name or folder structure is changed on a computer, you may not be  
able to play back images or movies. Refer to the Software Starter Guide for  
information regarding folder structure or file names.  
Playback stops, or audio cuts out.  
Use a card that has been formatted on this camera (p. 52).  
If you copy a movie to a memory card that reads slowly, playback may interrupt  
momentarily.  
Depending on its capabilities, the computer may drop frames, or the audio may  
cut out, when playing movies.  
Cannot operate buttons.  
When the mode dial is set to 9, some buttons cannot be used (p. 57).  
153  
List of Messages that Appear on the Screen  
If error messages appear on the LCD monitor, try one of the following  
solutions.  
No memory card  
The memory card is not installed in the correct direction. Install the memory card  
in the correct direction (p. 16).  
Card locked!  
The SD memory card or SDHC memory card’s write protect tab is set to “Lock”.  
Unlock the write protect tab (p. 18).  
Cannot record!  
You attempted to shoot an image without the a memory card, or with a memory  
card installed incorrectly. Install the memory card in the correct direction when  
shooting (p. 16).  
Memory card error (p. 52)  
Contact your Canon Customer Support Help Desk as there may be a problem  
with the camera.  
Memory card full  
There is not enough free space on the memory card to shoot (pp. 24, 55, 69, 83)  
or edit images (pp. 125 130). Erase the images (pp. 28, 118) to open space for  
new images, or insert an empty memory card (p. 16).  
Change the battery pack. (p. 16)  
No image.  
There are no images recorded on the memory card that can be displayed.  
Protected! (p. 121)  
Unidentified Image/Incompatible JPEG/Image too large./RAW  
Unsupported images or data, or corrupted image data cannot be displayed.  
Images manipulated on a computer, that have had their file name changed, or  
have been taken with a different camera may not display.  
Cannot magnify!/Cannot rotate/Cannot modify image/Cannot  
register this image!/Cannot modify/Cannot assign to category  
Incompatible images cannot be magnified (p. 115), rotated (p. 125), edited  
(pp. 125 130), registered to the start-up screen (p. 147), categorized (p. 123),  
or added to a print list (p. 133).  
Images manipulated on a computer, that have had their file name changed, or  
have been taken with a different camera may not be magnified, rotated, edited,  
registered to the start-up screen, categorized, or added to a print list.  
Movies cannot be magnified (p. 115), edited (pp. 125 130), added to a print list  
(p. 131), or registered to the start-up screen (p. 146).  
154  
   
List of Messages that Appear on the Screen  
Cannot select!  
When selecting the selection range (pp. 119, 121, 124), you tried to select a  
starting image that was after the last image or you tried to select an ending  
image that was before the starting image.  
You tried to select more than 501 images (pp. 119, 121, 124).  
Too many marks.  
You selected more than 998 images to send in print settings. Select less than  
998 images (p. 133).  
Cannot complete!  
Print settings could not be saved correctly. Reduce the number of settings and  
try again (p. 133).  
Naming error!  
The file name could not be created because there is an image with the same  
name as the folder that the camera is attempting to create, or the highest  
possible file number has already been reached (p. 141). In the 3 menu, change  
[File Numbering] to [Auto Reset] (p. 140) or format the memory card (p. 52).  
Communication error  
Images could not be transferred to the computer or printed due to the large  
amount of images (approx. 1000) stored on the memory card. Use a  
commercially available USB card reader to transfer the images. Insert the  
memory card into the printer's card slot to print.  
Lens error, restart camera  
A lens error was detected. Press the power button to turn the camera off and  
back on (p. 42). If this error message continues to display, contact your Canon  
Customer Support Help Desk as there may be a problem with the lens.  
This error can occur if you hold the lens while it is in motion or when using it in a  
location with excessive dust or sand in the air.  
Exx (xx: number)  
A camera error was detected. Press the power button to turn the camera off and  
back on (p. 42).  
If an error code displays directly after taking a picture, the shot may not have  
been recorded. Check image in playback mode.  
If this error code reappears, note the number and contact your Canon Customer  
Support Help Desk as there may be a problem with the camera.  
155  
Functions Available in Each Shooting Mode  
Shooting modes  
A 9  
G
M B  
D
Function  
Exposure Compensation (p. 76)/Exposure Shift (p. 105)  
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Focusing Zone (pp. 71, 89)  
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AE Lock (pp. 90, 105)/FE Lock (p. 91)  
TV Display (p. 81)  
Face Selection (p. 87)  
On  
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Information Display (p. 44)  
Func. Menu  
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White Balance (p. 75)  
ISO Speed (p. 74)  
Exposure Compensation (p. 99)  
Drive Mode (p. 77)  
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*1 Not selectable, but turned on whenever flash is used. *2 Possible settings: 0 – 30  
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is set by default. *5  
and t set to  
.
156  
   
Functions Available in Each Shooting Mode  
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{ Selectable — Not selectable  
157  
Menus  
4 Shooting Menu  
Shooting modes  
A 9  
G
M B  
D
Function  
Face Detect  
Center  
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AF Frame (p. 84)  
AF Frame Size (p. 84)  
Servo AF (p. 86)  
Normal/Small  
On/Off  
AF Mode (p. 88)  
Continuous/Single  
Standard/Off  
1
*
Digital Zoom (p. 63)  
Digital Tele-converter (1.5x/2.0x)  
On/Off  
AF-Point Zoom (p. 85)  
1
AF-assist Beam (p. 143) On/Off  
*
MF-Point Zoom  
On/Off  
Safety MF (p. 90)  
On/Off  
Auto/Manual  
-2 to +2  
Flash Mode  
Flash Exp. Comp  
Minimum/  
Medium/  
Maximum  
Flash Settings  
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Flash Output  
Red-Eye Corr.  
On/Off  
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Red-Eye Lamp On/Off  
Safety FE  
Off/Auto  
On/Off  
On/Off  
1
1
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*
*
Safety Shift (p. 93)  
{
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Off/2 – 10 sec./Hold  
Off/Detailed/Focus Check  
On/Off  
*
Review Info (p. 143)  
Blink Detection (p. 97)  
Off/Grid Lines  
Disp. Overlay (p. 144)  
3:2 Guide/Both  
1
1
Continuous/Off  
*
*
IS Mode (p. 144)  
Shoot Only/Panning  
Off/Date/Date & Time  
{
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Date Stamp (p. 65)  
Set c button (p. 145)  
*1 Always [On].  
*2 Available when h is selected.  
*3 Fixed to [2 sec.].  
158  
   
Menus  
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159  
 
Menus  
3 Set up Menu  
Item  
Options/Summary  
Ref. Page  
Mute  
On/Off*  
Volume  
Set all operation sounds (5 levels).  
Set the sounds played for each camera  
operation.  
Sound Options  
LCD Brightness  
Set within a range of ±7.  
Add an image as start-up image.  
On*/Off  
Start-up Image  
Hints & Tips  
Format  
Formats card, erasing all data  
Continuous*/Auto Reset  
Create New Folder/Auto Create  
On*/Off  
File Numbering  
Create Folder  
Auto Rotate  
Lens Retract  
Power Saving  
1 min.*/0 sec.  
Auto Power Down: On*/Off  
Display Off: 10, 20 or 30 sec./1*, 2 or 3 min.  
Time Zone  
Date/Time  
Home/World  
Date and time settings  
m/cm* ft/in  
Distance Units  
Video System  
Language  
NTSC/PAL  
Select displayed language.  
Returns camera to default settings.  
Reset All  
* Default setting  
160  
Menus  
1 Playback Menu  
Item  
Options/Summary  
Ref. Page  
Slideshow  
My Category  
Erase  
Plays back images automatically.  
Categorizes images.  
Erases images.  
Protect  
Protects images.  
i-Contrast  
Red-Eye Correction  
Trimming  
Resize  
Corrects dark portions of images.  
Corrects red eyes in images.  
Trims portions of images.  
Resizes and saves images.  
Adjusts colors in images.  
Rotates images.  
My Colors  
Rotate  
Resume  
Last seen*/Last shot  
Transition  
* Default setting  
Fade*/Scroll/Slide/Off  
2 Print Menu  
Item  
Options/Summary  
Displays printing screen.  
Ref. Page  
Print  
Select Images & Qty.  
Select Range  
Selects individual images for printing.  
Selects starting and ending images for printing.  
Selects all images for printing.  
Cancels all settings for printing.  
Sets the printing style.  
Select All Images  
Clear All Selections  
Print Settings  
161  
 
Handling Precautions  
Equipment  
This camera is a high-precision electronic device. Do not drop it or subject  
it to strong impacts.  
Never place the camera close to magnets or motors that generate strong  
electromagnetic fields. Exposure to strong magnetic fields may cause  
malfunctions or corrupt image data.  
If water droplets have fallen or dirt is stuck on the camera or LCD monitor,  
wipe with a dry soft cloth or eyeglass wiper. Do not rub or apply force.  
Never use cleaners containing organic solvents to wipe the camera or  
LCD monitor.  
Use a commercially available blower brush to remove dust from the lens.  
For stubborn dirt contact the closest Canon Customer Support Help Desk  
as listed in your Warranty System Booklet.  
When you move the camera rapidly from cold to hot temperatures,  
condensation may form on the internal or external surfaces of the camera.  
To avoid condensation, put the camera in an airtight, resealable plastic  
bag and let it adjust to temperature changes slowly before removing it  
from the bag.  
If condensation has formed, stop using the camera immediately.  
Continued use may damage the camera. Remove the battery and  
memory card, and wait until the moisture has completely evaporated  
before resuming use.  
Memory Cards  
A memory card is a high-precision electronic device. Do not bend, apply  
force or subject it to strong impacts. Doing so may corrupt image data  
recorded on the memory card.  
Do not spill liquids on the memory card. Do not touch the memory card’s  
terminals with your hands or metallic objects.  
Do not store memory cards near a TV, speakers or other devices that  
generate magnetic fields or static electricity. Doing so may corrupt image  
data recorded on the memory card.  
Do not store memory cards in hot, humid or dusty locations.  
162  
 
Specifications  
Camera Effective Pixels. . . . . . . . . . .Approx. 12.1 million  
Image Sensor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1/2.3-inch type CCD (Total number of pixels:  
Approx. 12.4 million)  
Lens. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5.0 (W) – 60.0 (T) mm  
35mm film equivalent: 28 (W) – 336 (T) mm  
f/3.4 (W) – f/5.3 (T)  
Digital Zoom. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Approx. 4.0x (Up to approx. 48x in combination  
with the optical zoom)  
LCD Monitor. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3.0 TFT LCD color monitor  
Approx. 230,000 dots, Picture coverage 100%  
AF Frame Mode. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Face Detect/Center  
Servo AF . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .On/Off  
Focusing Range (from end of lens) . .Normal: 50 cm (1.6 ft.) – infinity (W)/  
100 cm (3.3 ft.) – infinity (T)  
Macro: 2 – 50 cm (0.79 in. – 1.6 ft.) (W)  
Super Macro: 0 – 2 cm (0 – 0.79 in.)  
Manual Focus: 2 cm (0.79 in.) – infinity (W)/  
100 cm (3.3 ft.) – infinity (T)  
Shutter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Mechanical shutter and electronic shutter  
Shutter Speed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 – 1/3200 sec.  
15 – 1/3200 sec. (Total shutter speed range)  
Image Stabilization . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Lens-shift type  
Metering Type . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Evaluative, Center-weighted average or Spot  
Exposure Compensation . . . . . . . . . .±2 stops in 1/3-stop increments  
ISO speed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Auto, ISO 80/100/200/400/800/1600  
(Standard Output Sensitivity,  
Recommended Exposure Index)  
White Balance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Auto, Day Light, Cloudy, Tungsten, Fluorescent,  
Fluorescent H, Custom  
Built-in Flash . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Auto, On, Slow Synchro, Off  
* Red-eye reduction/Red-eye correction settings  
available  
Built-in Flash Range . . . . . . . . . . . . .50 cm – 3.0 m (1.6 – 9.8 ft.) (W)/  
1.0 – 2.0 m (3.3 – 6.6 ft.) (T)  
Shooting Modes. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Shooting Mode: M, Av, Tv, P, Auto, Easy, Portrait,  
Landscape, Night Snapshot, Kids & Pets, Indoor,  
SCN, Movie  
SCN Mode: Sunset, Night Scene, Fireworks,  
Beach, Aquarium, Foliage, Snow, ISO 3200, Color  
Accent, Color Swap, Stitch Assist  
Movie Mode: Standard, Color Accent, Color Swap  
Continuous Shooting . . . . . . . . . . . . .Approx. 2.3 images/sec.  
Self-timer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Approx. 10-sec./Approx. 2-sec. delay, FaceSelf-  
Timer, Custom Timer  
i-Contrast . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Auto/Off  
163  
   
Specifications  
Recording Media . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .SD memory card, SDHC memory card,  
MultiMediaCard, MMCplus memory card,  
HC MMCplus memory card  
File Format. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Design rule for Camera File system and DPOF  
compliant  
Data Type . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Still images: Exif 2.2 (JPEG)  
Movies: MOV (Image data: H.264, Audio data:  
Linear PCM) (Mono)  
Compression . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Fine, Normal  
Number of Recording Pixels  
(Still images) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Large: 4000 x 3000 pixels  
Medium 1: 3264 x 2448 pixels  
Medium 2: 2592 x 1944 pixels  
Medium 3: 1600 x 1200 pixels  
Small: 640 x 480 pixels  
Widescreen: 4000 x 2248 pixels  
(Movies) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1280 x 720 pixels (30 frames/sec.)  
640 x 480 pixels (30 frames/sec.)  
320 x 240 pixels (30 frames/sec.)  
Number of Possible Shots . . . . . . . . .Approx. 280 images (Based on CIPA standardized  
measurement)  
Audio . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Quantization: 16 bit  
Sampling Rate: 44.100 kHz  
Playback Function . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Single Image, Movie, Magnified Focus, Index,  
Magnified, Filtered Playback, Slideshow  
Editing Function . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Erase, Protect, My Category, Resize, My Colors,  
i-Contrast, Trimming, Rotate, Red-Eye Correction  
Direct Print Type . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .PictBridge capable  
Interface. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Hi-Speed USB (Dedicated connector with unified  
type of digital, audio and video*)  
HDMI (HDMI Mini Connector)  
* mini-B compatible  
Video/Audio output (NTSC and PAL capable,  
mono audio)  
Communication Settings . . . . . . . . . .MTP, PTP  
Power. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Battery Pack NB-5L (rechargeable lithium-ion  
battery)  
AC adapter kit ACK-DC30  
Operating Temperatures . . . . . . . . . .0 – 40 °C (32 – 104 °F)  
Operating Humidity . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10 – 90%  
Dimensions (excluding protrusions). .103.0 x 60.5 x 37.6 mm (4.06 x 2.38 x 1.48 in.)  
Weight (camera body only) . . . . . . . .Approx. 220 g (7.76 oz.)  
164  
Specifications  
Battery Pack NB-5L  
Type. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Rechargeable lithium-ion battery  
Voltage. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3.7 V DC  
Capacity. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1120 mAh  
Charging cycles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Approx. 300 times  
Operating temperature. . . . . . . . . . . .0 – 40 °C (32 – 104 °F)  
Dimensions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .32.0 x 44.9 x 7.9 mm (1.26 x 1.77 x 0.31 in.)  
Weight . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Approx. 25 g (0.88 oz.)  
Battery Charger CB-2LX/CB-2LXE  
Rated input . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .100 – 240 V AC (50/60 Hz), 0.085 A (100 V) –  
0.05 A (240 V)  
Rated output . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4.2 V DC, 0.7 A  
Charge time . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Approx. 2 hours 5 min.  
Operating temperature. . . . . . . . . . . .0 – 40 °C (32 – 104 °F)  
Dimensions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .57.5 x 81.6 x 21.0 mm (2.26 x 3.21 x 0.83 in.)  
Weight . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Approx. 65 g (2.29 oz.) (CB-2LX)  
Approx. 59 g (2.08 oz.) (CB-2LXE) (excluding  
power cord)  
All data is based on tests by Canon.  
Camera specifications or appearance are subject to change without notice.  
About MPEG-4 Licensing  
This product is licensed under AT&T patents for the MPEG-4 standard and  
may be used for encoding MPEG-4 compliant video and/or decoding MPEG-  
4 compliant video that was encoded only (1) for a personal and non-  
commercial purpose or (2) by a video provider licensed under the AT&T  
patents to provide MPEG-4 compliant video.  
No license is granted or implied for any other use for MPEG-4 standard.  
* Notice displayed in English as required.  
165  
Index  
Default Settings........................................ 51  
Deleting J Erasing  
Numerics  
3:2 Guide................................................ 144  
DIGITAL CAMERA Solution Disk......... 2, 35  
Digital Tele-Converter .............................. 64  
Digital Zoom ............................................. 63  
Direct Print Button ............................ 29, 145  
Display Language..................................... 21  
Display Overlay ...................................... 144  
DPOF ............................................. 131, 133  
A
AC Adapter Kit.................................. 40, 150  
Accessories.............................................. 38  
AE Lock.................................................... 90  
AF J Auto Focus  
AF Frame ................................................. 25  
AF Lock.................................................... 86  
Aquarium (Scene Mode) .......................... 60  
Audio........................................................ 49  
AV Cable............................................ 2, 116  
E
Easy mode ............................................... 56  
Editing  
i-Contrast ............................................ 129  
My Colors............................................ 128  
Red-Eye Correction ............................ 130  
Resizing (Making Images Smaller) ..... 126  
Rotating Images.................................. 125  
Trimming............................................. 127  
Enlarged Display .................................... 115  
Equipment  
Default Settings..................................... 51  
Holding the Camera.............................. 13  
Erase All................................................. 118  
Erasing All Images ................................. 118  
Erasing Images ........................................ 28  
Error Messages...................................... 154  
Exposure  
B
Battery  
Battery Charger........................... 2, 14, 40  
Charge Indicator ................................... 15  
Date/Time Battery................................. 20  
Power Saving........................................ 53  
Recharge .............................................. 14  
Battery Charger........................................ 14  
Beach (Scene Mode)................................ 60  
Black and White Images........................... 78  
C
Camera Shake ................................. 62, 145  
Clock Function.......................................... 54  
Color Accent (Scene Mode)........... 100, 104  
Color Swap (Scene Mode)............. 100, 104  
Components Guide .................................. 42  
Compression J Image Quality  
Continuous Shooting................................ 77  
AF ......................................................... 77  
LV ......................................................... 77  
Control Dial........................................... 9, 43  
AE Lock................................................. 90  
Correction ............................................. 76  
FE Lock................................................. 91  
F
Face Detect.............................................. 84  
Face Selection.......................................... 87  
Face Self-Timer........................................ 67  
Factory Settings J Default Settings  
FE Lock .................................................... 91  
File Number............................................ 140  
Filtered Playback.................................... 111  
Fireworks (Scene Mode) .......................... 60  
Flash  
D
Date and Time  
Adding to Image.................................... 65  
Changing............................................... 20  
Date/Time Battery................................. 20  
Settings................................................. 19  
Date and Time J Date/Time  
Off ......................................................... 62  
On ......................................................... 70  
166  
 
Index  
Supplementary Flash ............................ 40  
Focus  
Landscape (Scene Mode) ........................ 58  
LCD monitor J Screen  
AF Frame .............................................. 25  
AF Frame Mode .................................... 84  
AF Lock................................................. 86  
AF-Point Zoom...................................... 85  
Face Selection ...................................... 87  
Servo AF ............................................... 86  
Focus Check........................................... 114  
Focus Lock............................................... 81  
Format J Memory Card, Formatting  
Formatting (Memory Card) ................. 22, 52  
FUNC. Menu  
Basic Operations................................... 47  
List ...................................................... 156  
M
Macro/Super Macro.................................. 71  
Memory Cards.................................... 16, 18  
Available Shots ..................................... 18  
Formatting....................................... 22, 52  
Menu  
Basic Operations................................... 48  
List....................................................... 158  
Metering Mode.......................................... 88  
MMCplus/HC MMCplus Memory Card ..... 18  
Mode Dial ................................................. 42  
Movie  
Editing ................................................. 107  
Image Quality (Frame Rate)................ 105  
Mode ................................................... 104  
Recording Pixels ................................. 105  
Shooting Time............................... 32, 105  
Viewing (Playback)................................ 33  
MultiMediaCard J Memory Card  
G
Green Leaves/Autumn Foliage  
(Scene Mode).......................................... 60  
Grid Lines............................................... 144  
H
High Speed (ISO)............................... 61, 74  
High-Power Flash..................................... 40  
Histogram ................................................. 46  
Household Power................................... 150  
Mute.......................................................... 49  
My Category ........................................... 123  
My Colors ......................................... 78, 128  
N
I
Night Scene (Scene Mode) ...................... 60  
Night Snapshot (Scene Mode) ................. 58  
Number of Shots....................................... 15  
i-Contrast.......................................... 95, 129  
Image Quality (Compression Ratio) ......... 72  
Images  
P
Editing J Editing  
Erasing Images ..................................... 28  
Playback J View  
Protect................................................. 121  
Indoor (Scene Mode)................................ 59  
Interface Cable............................... 2, 29, 35  
ISO Speed................................................ 74  
ISO 3200 (Scene Mode)........................... 61  
Panoramic Photos .................................. 102  
Personal Printing Guide.............................. 2  
PictBridge ................................................. 29  
Playback J View  
Playback Button................................ 27, 146  
Playback With Transition Effects............ 115  
Portrait (Scene Mode) .............................. 58  
Postcard Size ........................................... 73  
Power J Battery  
K
Kids&Pets (Scene Mode) ......................... 58  
Power Button............................................ 42  
Power Saving ........................................... 53  
Print Settings (DPOF)............................. 131  
Printer................................................. 29, 30  
L
Lamp................................... 42, 66, 142, 143  
167  
Index  
Printing..................................................... 29  
Program AE.............................................. 70  
Protect.................................................... 121  
T
Terminal ........................................... 29, 116  
Tone (White Balance)............................... 75  
Transferring Images to a Computer ......... 34  
Travel abroad ................................... 15, 139  
Trimming ................................................ 127  
Troubleshooting...................................... 151  
R
Recording Pixels (Image Size)................. 72  
Red-Eye  
Auto Correction..................................... 96  
Correction ........................................... 130  
Reduction............................................ 142  
Resizing (Making Images Smaller)......... 126  
Rotating Images..................................... 125  
V
Video J Movies  
Viewing (Playback)  
Enlarged Display................................. 115  
Index Display ...................................... 110  
Single Image Playback ......................... 27  
Slideshow............................................ 112  
Viewing Images on a TV..................... 116  
Viewing Images on a TV ........................ 116  
S
SCN (Scene Mode).................................. 58  
Screen  
Display Language ................................. 21  
Information Displayed ........................... 44  
Menu Operations ............................ 47, 48  
Switching the Display...................... 44, 45  
SD/SDHC Memory Card .......................... 18  
Self-Timer  
W
White Balance .......................................... 75  
Wide (Recording Pixels)..................... 72, 73  
World Clock............................................ 139  
Wrist Strap J Strap  
10 second Self-Timer............................ 66  
Changing Delay and  
Number of Shots................................... 80  
Face Self-Timer .................................... 67  
Two Second Self-Timer ........................ 79  
Sepia Tones............................................. 78  
Servo AF .................................................. 86  
Shooting Date and Time J Date/Time  
Shooting Using a TV ................................ 81  
Shutter Button .......................................... 23  
Slideshow............................................... 112  
Snow (Scene Mode)................................. 61  
Software  
Y
You Think There is a Problem................ 151  
Z
Zoom ............................................ 24, 31, 63  
DIGITAL CAMERA Solution Disk...... 2, 35  
Software Starter Guide ........................... 2  
Transferring Images to a Computer...... 34  
Sound Settings  
Mute...................................................... 49  
Stitch Assist (Scene Mode) .................... 102  
Strap..................................................... 2, 13  
Sunset (Scene Mode)............................... 59  
Supplementary Flash ............................... 40  
168  

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