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All About Scene Mode (Part 1)

6/26/2013 10:19:37 AM

Harness the power of your camera’s scene modes to make better pictures in any circumstances

Your camera's Scene modes are for amateurs, right? Not really. Scene modes can be great shortcuts that allow even professionals to make some powerful changes with the flip of a single switch. Here's what happens behind the scenes of each mode, and how you can put them to use in your own pictures.

Portrait Mode

When you set your camera to Portrait mode, it automatically chooses a wide aperture (like //2 or //2.8) to create a shallow depth of field. This helps to isolate your subject, visually separating him or her from the background. The closer you get to your subject, the more noticeable the effect will be, so stand just a few feet from your subject and fill the frame with his or her head and shoulders.

When you set your camera to Portrait mode, it automatically chooses a wide aperture (like //2 or //2.8) to create a shallow depth of field.

When you set your camera to Portrait mode, it automatically chooses a wide aperture to create a shallow depth of field.

To strengthen the effect, set your lens to a longer telephoto setting and keep an eye on the background, choosing something simple as a backdrop to minimize distractions. Some cameras also utilize face-detection focusing in Portrait mode, and enable red-eye-reducing fill-flash and a subtle softening effect for pleasing skin tones.

Sports mode

Sports mode is built for capturing fast action. To that end, the camera will select its fastest available shutter speed and may increase the ISO to accomplish this. The aperture is likely to open up and create a shallower depth of field, which could become an issue with a fast-moving subject.

Sports mode is built for capturing fast action

Sports mode is built for capturing fast action

Because of the high shutter speed, the camera won't use a flash, and if it has the capability, it will utilize continuous focus-tracking and high-speed shooting so you can fire off several frames in a row.

The best way to photograph a fast-moving subject (like a runner or a cyclist) is to pan the camera with the motion as the subject crosses the frame. If you'd like to minimize the speed of that movement, position yourself so the action is moving toward the camera or away from it, rather than laterally across the scene.

Macro/Close-Up Mode

Use Macro mode for shooting small subjects (like insects and flowers) or for close-up details. On some point-and-shoot cameras with motorized zooms, this mode will spur the camera to automatically choose the focal length at which it can focus closest.

Use Macro mode for shooting small subjects (like insects and flowers) or for close-up details.

Use Macro mode for shooting small subjects (like insects and flowers) or for close-up details.

Handholding for macro shots can be tricky, as the slightest movement can mean the difference between a subject in totally sharp focus and one that's blurry. Try to use your camera on a tripod, or at the very least position yourself so you can brace the handheld camera against another object. Depth of field can be microscopic in macro, so maintaining a steady composition is crucial. Flash is usually set to automatic, so it will fire if needed and compensate for being so close to the subject.

Landscape Mode

Landscape mode is the polar opposite of Portrait mode. With the lens focused at infinity, instead of choosing a wide aperture to create a shallow depth of field, Landscape mode prompts the camera to choose a small aperture (such as //16 or //22) to increase depth of field so that all elements of a landscape, from foreground to background, will be in focus.

Landscape mode is the polar opposite of Portrait mode.

Landscape mode is the polar opposite of Portrait mode.

To accomplish this, the camera is likely going to have to use a slower shutter speed, especially if you're working in low light. To prevent blur, a tripod is an ideal accessory for landscape mode.

The flash is also disabled because the camera assumes you're photographing something at a distance. In some cases, saturation is boosted subtly for more vibrant foliage, although this can be separated out into its own mode.

Night Portrait

If there's one Scene mode that should be on everyone's radar, its Night Portrait. This mode uses a combination of a long shutter speed and fill-flash, sometimes referred to as "dragging the shutter."

The premise is simple: If you're photographing a portrait in low light, the long ambient exposure will allow the background to register on the sensor, while the fill-flash will illuminate the subject. That combination is a real show-stopper, as it prevents the dreaded "brightly lit subject standing in front of a pure black background," just as it avoids a blurry foreground subject that would result from a long exposure for the background.

If there's one Scene mode that should be on everyone's radar, its Night Portrait.

If there's one Scene mode that should be on everyone's radar, its Night Portrait.

Ever notice at a sporting event or concert all those flashes in the stands? If those photographers were making portraits with Night Portrait mode, they'd have nicely lit foreground subjects and a brightly illuminated playing field or stage in the background.

Use a tripod to get a background in sharp focus. For a bit of artistic blur, hand-hold and move the camera. If your camera has face-detection technology, enable it in order to focus on the subject rather than the background.

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