Custom Control Menu
John Greengo
Lessons
Class Introduction
08:45 2Photo Basics
03:55 3Basic Camera Controls
05:11 4Mode Dial
19:08 5Top Of Camera
10:15 6Back Of Camera
06:11 7Viewfinder Display
05:07 8Back of Camera Buttons
22:08Live View Menu
16:05 10Movie Mode Menu
10:23 11Left & Right Sides Of Camera
15:57 12Bottom Of Camera
02:46 13Front Of Camera
03:18 14Lens Options
10:49 15Playback Menu
07:23 16Photo Shooting Menu
08:34 17ISO Shooting Menu
09:03 18Image Quality Shooting Menus
09:16 19Multiple Exposure & HDR Menus
05:48 20Movie Shooting Menu
07:25 21Custom Setting Menu
09:13 22Timer & Bracketing Menus
08:27 23Custom Control Menu
05:44 24Set Up Menu
28:47 25My Menu
03:03 26Camera Operation
09:50Lesson Info
Custom Control Menu
We've alluded to this control many times before in this class. First item in the control section is the "Custom control assignment", so there are a number of function buttons on the camera that can be assigned different controls. We're not gonna go through all the different controls that you can assign to all the buttons, but I encourage you to dive in here and take a look, see if there's a way to re-program the buttons in order to work better for something that you may want. And, so, a lot of great options in here for tweaking controls and just finding things a little bit more quickly than having to dive into the menu. The OK button on the back of the camera can be customized and so feel free to dive in here and control it. One of the things that you can do here is that normally by pressing the OK button, it moves the focusing point back to the center. You can have it just simply highlight where the point is currently, or you can have it do nothing at all. In the playback mode, that O...
K button can do a few different things. It can turn on the thumbnails on and off, which is a nice option, or maybe turning on those histograms might be good for you. You can also customize it to work in Live view, selecting the center focus point, or if you want to zoom in, if you zoom in to check sharpness quite a bit, that would be a good option. So that's all customizing the OK button. Next up is customizing the command dials, so remember, in the back, we have the main command, and in the front, we have the sub-command, and there are lots of different tweaks we can do to these dials. First off, we can reverse the rotation of the dials when we are in exposure compensation, so when you press "Exposure compensation", and you want the indicator to go to the right, which direction do you turn the dial? Well, you turn it to the right, and it's perfectly logical and that works as normal, so I don't think that one needs to be changed. If you want to change the shutter speeds and apertures. Well, if it's off to the minus side, and you're wondering, well, which way should I turn the back dial in order to get the proper exposure? Logic in my mind says I would want to turn that dial to the right hand side. And in order to do that, you have to get this mode here switched to the shutter speed aperture setting and so, if you select this here under "Reverse rotation", you're reversing the rotation when you're selecting shutter speeds and apertures, and it's gonna make setting them a whole lot easier, I think, when you are in a manual mode, because the dial movement will mimic the movement of the indicator in there. And so, it's a little something that I know has caused a lot of new Nikon photographers a lot of grief, because it's telling you to go this way, but I have to go this way to fix it, and now everything will be going in the right direction. If you would like to change the main command and the sub-command, as far as what they do, ones easier to reach on your fingers for the way your hand holds the camera, you can completely swap their operation forward and backward. You can change what they're doing with the exposure setting, as well, and is along with the Autofocus settings, and so, you remember one of them changes the area that you focus, and the other changes the mode in which you focus, and so you can swap those back and forth as well. Usually not real necessary in that case. Alright, so you can also go in to "Menus and playback", and so you can adjust these controls, the dial controls can also be used in the menus and playback. And if you want to activate them so that you can scroll up and down in the menu, that's kind of a nice option, doesn't really hurt anything. Sub-dial advance, normally you're using the back of the camera dial to go forward and back as you play back through images, and the sub-command dial will jump 10 frames forward or 50 frames forward, or it can protect your images. Or anytime you're playing back images, what else do you do with your images? And you can set this up so that it's just a little bit faster and easier to jump between items or to activate a particular function. Next up, "Release button to use dial". So, normally with these Nikon cameras, what you need to do is you need to press a button, hold it down, and then turn the dial. And that's how you activate that particular feature. It's kind of a safety protocol, so that you can't just accidentally press a button and have something happen on this case. But if you would prefer, you could have the option of pressing the button, and then having a small time gap in which you can just turn the dial at your leisure. And so, if you were just working the camera with one hand, or one finger, this might be an easier option, and so some people like this. It is the way other unmentionable brands of cameras work. So, some cameras work on a push and hold, some with a push and a time limit. And so if you want it work like other cameras, you can set it up to do that. If you want to reverse the indicators, which side the plus and minus is on, you can do it. There's some older Nikon cameras that have the minus on the right hand side, and if you want this camera to match them, you can switch this one around. Next up is movie controls, and so if you are recording movies, there are a couple buttons that can be customized for your needs. And so, feel free to go in, check out the different options, if you shoot a lot of movies, this will enable you to just do a few more things a little bit more quickly and easily without diving into menus.
Class Materials
Ratings and Reviews
Keshav
Helps you master the camera controls very quickly. I'm glad I took the course. Without it, I'm sure it would have taken me years to know and use the full power of this camera. Great Course. Highly recommend.
Thomas Sielaff
Great, great course. Could not be any clearer on what to know, what to do, and in all, making understanding my camera a fun thing! Well, well, worth that cost. A steal really!!
Roy Shenfield
This is a great course! I recently bought a D7500 and was somewhat stymied by the large number of different possible settings and the several hundred page user manual and menu guide. This course covers the vast majority of what I need to know and in a reasonable amount of detail. I especially liked the material on menus as he went through most of them in detail. Additionally all the slides shown in the course are available in pdf as well as several pages detailing the authors recommended settings. I highly recommend, especially given the $24.00 special offering for this.
Student Work
Related Classes
Camera Guides