P Mode is a hybrid of A and S Mode. Or in Canon terms AV and TV mode. There is a feature called program shift that lets you change Aperture and shutter speed with on of the dials on the camera. Joe Buissink Canon Ambassador and who is a Hollywood wedding photographer shoots in P Mode and uses program shift and only uses M mode for flash. When he's taking photos and needs them too all look the same he holds down the AEL lock button that locks down the exposure and white balance. Also there is half press shutty lock that locks down exposure and white balance. The reason these good is because to avoid human error. I've heard of stories even from very high end wedding photographers forgetting to change their settings. My Olympus cameras have a feature that display the image I just took for 0.3 seconds so I know the image came out right.
I have played with it before. I just personally prefer aperture priority. I think auto iso is a good option as long as you set your upper limit and don't under expose images that require a lot of recovery. I know most clients can't tell but I like to keep as clean of an image as possible for my own ease of editing.
Outstanding tips!
Glad it was helpful!
P Mode is a hybrid of A and S Mode. Or in Canon terms AV and TV mode. There is a feature called program shift that lets you change Aperture and shutter speed with on of the dials on the camera.
Joe Buissink Canon Ambassador and who is a Hollywood wedding photographer shoots in P Mode and uses program shift and only uses M mode for flash.
When he's taking photos and needs them too all look the same he holds down the AEL lock button that locks down the exposure and white balance.
Also there is half press shutty lock that locks down exposure and white balance.
The reason these good is because to avoid human error. I've heard of stories even from very high end wedding photographers forgetting to change their settings.
My Olympus cameras have a feature that display the image I just took for 0.3 seconds so I know the image came out right.
Thanks for the great video!! Keep em coming!
Great work, loved the video!
Thanks, I appreciate it!
Instead of Aperature Priority (or whatever Canon calls it), have you used Auto ISO? Your clients don't worry about graininess.
I have played with it before. I just personally prefer aperture priority. I think auto iso is a good option as long as you set your upper limit and don't under expose images that require a lot of recovery.
I know most clients can't tell but I like to keep as clean of an image as possible for my own ease of editing.
R5 has a dual native ISO (100 / 400), thus ISO 400 would be a better choice than ISO 200, once you've to step up from base ISO 100.