Canon PowerShot A1200 Silver PowerShot A1200 Camera User Guide - Page 77

Shooting Long Exposures

Page 77 highlights

Shooting Long Exposures Even if your face is not detected after joining the subjects, the shutter will release approximately 15 seconds later. Shooting Long Exposures You can set the shutter speed to a range between 1 and 15 seconds to shoot long exposures. However, you should attach the camera to a tripod to prevent the camera from moving and blurring the image. Choose ≈. z Follow Steps 1 - 2 on p. 64 to choose ≈. Choose the shutter speed. z Press the o button. z Press the qr buttons to choose the shutter speed, then press the m button. Confirm the exposure. z When you press the shutter button halfway, the exposure for the chosen shutter speed will appear on the screen. • The brightness of the image may differ from the brightness of the screen in Step 3 when the shutter button was pressed halfway. • 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. If the flash fires, the image may be overexposed. If this happens, set the flash to ! and shoot. 77

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Shooting Long Exposures
77
You can set the shutter speed to a range between 1 and 15 seconds to shoot
long exposures. However, you should attach the camera to a tripod to prevent
the camera from moving and blurring the image.
Choose
.
z
Follow Steps 1 – 2 on p. 64 to choose
.
Choose the shutter speed.
z
Press the
o
button.
z
Press the
qr
buttons to choose the
shutter speed, then press the
m
button.
Confirm the exposure.
z
When you press the shutter button
halfway, the exposure for the chosen
shutter speed will appear on the screen.
Even if your face is not detected after joining the subjects, the shutter will
release approximately 15 seconds later.
Shooting Long Exposures
The brightness of the image may differ from the brightness of the screen
in Step 3 when the shutter button was pressed halfway.
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.
If the flash fires, the image may be overexposed. If this happens, set the
flash to
!
and shoot.