Wednesday, 16 January 2013

Olympus Mirrorless Cameras Settings–the Live Super Control Panel

The Olympus Live Super Control Menu is very useful for the photographer who wants a dashboard that allows you to change settings. However, on the camera you have, it might be switched off as delivered.


Where to switch SCP on

Olympus cameras often have several Control Modes:
  • iAuto
  • P / A / S / M
  • ART
  • SCN
For each of those Control Modes, there are three alternative Quick Menus.
  • Live Guide
  • Live Control (reminiscent of the Point and Shoot Camera menus)
  • Live SCP
You can make each one of the quick menus available or not. On the camera, press 

Setup > Menu > D. Disp / Sound / PC > Control Settings

See this blog article if you want to see the screen displays.

Once you have switched on SCP, you can then use it.

    How to use the SCP

    1. Press the Ok button  to display the SCP.  See this DP Review article.
    2. Cursor to the rectangle by either
      1. rotating the dial
      2. touching the rectangle
      3. pressing the compass points of the dial / cluster
    3. Then either
      1. twirl the dial to change the setting or
      2. press Ok to display the horizontal bottom menu bar
    4. When the relevant choice is made, you do not have to press Ok, you can directly half press the Shutter Release

    Index of articles on settings for Olympus Mirrorless Cameras (E-PM2 and family)


    External websites and pages that you might find interesting

    Monday, 14 January 2013

    Olympus Mirrorless Camera Settings–Studio Electronic Flash

    Updated: 15th January 2013
    Camera settings are very subjective. This is my current profile for Studio shooting with Manual Electronic Flash Exposure

    Camera: Olympus PEN E-PM2 – OM-D has more buttons and dials so adjust to taste

    Premise

    Scenario: Studio Flash work without ambient light. All flashes on manual control. Camera on manual control.

    I assume that exposure settings are dictated by controlling the studio flash lights, lighting setup. Use the camera to vary f/no and ISO

    These settings are so that the camera does not hamper your flow.

    Exposure

    Exposure Mode Set “M” for Manual explicitly You have the option of buying a brace of automatic TTL exposure flash units and use the camera to interact and control the flash power that way. This scenario is about using manual flash units, non TTL controlled.
    Shutter Speed 1/250th Reduce the effect of ambient light. Check whether the light is even and not cut off
    +Paul Pavlinovich advises that if you use mixed triggering (radio & optical) on differing lights, you could run into issues where something slows the triggering. 1/125th is normally assumed to be comfortable shake reduced speed and the max for focal plane shutter models is not 1/250th.
    f/no Initially f/8 Adjust to taste - your flash power, flash proximity mix, ambient light will affect your choice

    These accessible via SCP

    ISO 200 initially Use electronic flash to avoid going high ISO. Also reduces effect of ambient light. Can't go lower on this model of camera.
    WB Flash WB  
    Flash 1/64th Power (settable when no flash mounted) else Full (third party external flash mounted) Does not affect wireless flash trigger. Reduces the impact of the little kit flash if using optical triggering.
    Sequential shots Single  
    IS Off  
    Focus S-AF Centre Spot  
    Face and Eye Priority On  

    Via MENU

    A. AF/MF > Full time AF Off  
    A. AF/MF > AEL/AFL > S-AF Mode 3 (AEL/AFL – S-AF)  
    A. AF/MF > AEL/AFL > MF Mode 3 (AEL/AFL – S-AF)  
    A. AF/MF > MF Assist On  
    A. AF/MF > […] Set Home Single Point AF  
    A. AF/MF > AF Illumination On For darkened studio. Off if the subject complains of the glare in their eyes.
    B. Button/Dial > Button Function > Fn Function AEL/AFL  
    B. Button/Dial > Button Function > Movie Button Test Picture Or Magnify if using non electronic lens  
    B. Button/Dial > Button Function > Cursor Pad Buttons Off Assuming that Dial Lock is Off and set to f/no control.
    B. Button/Dial > Button Function > Dial Function f/no  
    B. Button/Dial > Button Function > Dial Lock Off To allow changing f/no conveniently – might be touchy
    B. Button/Dial > Displ / Sound / PC > Live View Boost On When set to Manual Exposure, the viewfinder may go dark in a darkened studio
    B. Button/Dial > Displ / Sound / PC > Shutter Release Beep On  

    If you want to contribute any tips and ideas, happy to hear from you

    Sunday, 13 January 2013

    Menus, Buttons, Dials and Settings on Olympus Mirrorless Cameras

    Seems lots of people are buying into Olympus PEN and OM-D models. Some people come from Canon, Nikon ownership, others come from film. I've had Olympus Digital since the C-750 Ultra Zoom camera and eventually moved to the DSLRs, the E-510, E-330, E-620. Then,  E-PL1,  the E-PM2, now that E-M1. So I've lived the Olympus approach to buttons, menus, dials and settings for a little while.

    If you hand me a Nikon or Canon, I take a while to figure it out, I find the Olympus approach fairly logical but that's because I've used that gear for a while. As an aid, I thought I might write a series of articles for new users (not necessarily new to photography) on using / setting up the Olympus cameras.

    The My Settings Idea

    When I shot film SLR, I was often caught out. I would set up the camera for indoors and then wander outdoors and vice versa, with the wrong settings. I'm kinda klutzy like that. If you don't set up a profile / My Settings, you'll encounter the mistakes like that more often.

    The Idea

    You can reset the camera to factory settings. Most digital cameras I know have a menu to do that. What's worthwhile in Olympus gear is to have two or more "My Settings" to set up as a "home". You could set up My Settings 1 for indoors, My Settings 2 for outdoors. You could set up My Settings 1 for shooting colour and My Settings 2 for Black and White. You could switch between them very quickly without remembering a whole brace of menu steps. You could switch to one of them when you start a shooting session or at the start of a day.

    Yes, there are deficiencies with the implementation of My Settings - for example, we could have a memorable name for My Settings 1 - I am such a klutz that I forget what My Settings 1 was set for.

    To set up your camera and then save the state to My Settings 1 

    This only works when your camera is in either P A S or M exposure modes. It won't be much use in Green Auto / iAuto / Auto Everything. It won't be useful for SCENE modes or Art Filter modes.
    1. Set up your camera the way you want. 
    2. Press the [Menu] button - there will be a vertical menu panel on the left
    3. Choose Camera 1 Icon also known as  "Preliminary and Basic Shooting Options"
    4. Choose the menu Reset / My Set. Then you see the choices - Reset, Myset 1, Myset 2, Myset 3, Myset 4, Myself 5
    5. Place the cursor on Myset 1 and press Right Arrow to choose Set
    6. Press Ok
    You have now stored the camera's settings to Myset 1. 

    To get the camera back to this state

    You could now have used the camera for a bit, played around with this or that menu. You now want to recover back to Myset 1
    1. Press the [Menu] button
    2. Choose Camera 1 Icon 
    3. Choose Reset / My Set menu
    4. Place the cursor on Myset 1
    5. Press Ok and confirm
    You have now restored he camera's settings to Myset 1.

    You can subsequently tinker with the camera and choose different settings. These can be saved as Myset 2, 3, or 4

    If you want to get the camera to "as delivered" from the factory, choose the Reset menu item.