Thank you! I cut my teeth years ago on the Canon AE-1, joined the mirrorless club nearly 10 years ago with the Sony a6000, and now I'm thrilled to be back with Canon via the amazing R7. Your clear, no nonsense videos have been one of my favorite guides and I hope will continue to be.
Great video. My favourite tip is don’t put the camera away until you are about to get into your car. The bird you want might be in a tree right next to your car in the car park. How do I know this…
Thank you Chelsea and Tony for this tutorial. In the next few month I will "upgrade" from my beloved 7D2 to the R7 but I will stay with my EF L lenses, the 70-200 L f/2.8 and f/4 and 100-400 L USMII and mz 1.4x and 2x extenders. My 7D2 will stay as a backup camera - I never ever sell this great peace of camera! I have learned making wildlife phtotography with this camera lenses. My main subjects are rabbits, squirrels and so on. Hope the eze fokus system detects this animals as well as birds. Thank you both for all your great content that helps me very much, thank you. And I will looking forward for all your new videos here on YT.
Brilliant video. This video is priceless to those new to Wildlife and will help you far better than buying a more expensive camera and not fully understanding how the key photographic features work. Ian (UK)
Great review, I have been shooting animals in general for years. Shot with Rebel, the D7 Mark II and now, I finally got R7 and love the camera. Haven't been able to get out to shoot the wildlife yet, because of how busy we have been, but did shoot some dogs and it is amazing, how the camera captures fast with great focus and great light. I absolutely love the outcome of this amazing camera and the price tag is very good, for this specific camera as well. Thank you for reconfirming that this is a great camera in general, but most importantly for the wildlife, which I am still going to try it on with variety of species and lenses, hence macro and telephoto to capture variety of wildlife.
Thank you!! I'm finally making the leap into Mirrorless and your videos help differentiate the cameras, and this video in particular, shows me why I want to use certain settings, not just tell me settings to use. Bird photography is one of my favotire subjects to shoot. I've used Canon for years.
Thank you for this tutorial! I've had the R7 for close to a year now, but haven't tried too much bird photography. But my biggest takeaway, my personal "A-HA!" moment had nothing to do with birding, but was learning how to save the settings in a Custom profile!
Great tips! For perched birds, silence, so electronic shutter. For birds inflight, 1st curtain shutter to avoid the rolling shutter problem associated with electronic shutter. However the RAW burst and pre-shooting features, which promise to up your chances of capturing quick, unexpected moments requires use of electronic shutter.
Excellent video! I'm moving on from a Nikon D5600 (and I'm still pretty new to that), and as everyone has told me, "there's gonna be a steep learning curve." Both Tony and Chelsea's tips are excellent introductions to bird photography with this camera. The most useful tips for me at this moment are setting up the eye autofocus, setting back-button autofocus (I always use it) and setting up exposure compensation for light-colored birds against a light background. The LEAST useful (for me) is the recommendation for a $13 k lens! One thing that might have been worth exploring is the use of non RF lenses with appropriate adapters.
There is no doubt that these new cameras are pretty incredible. Years ago (well, a few) I was watching y'all review the 7Dmk2 when I was getting ready to upgrade from my t3i. Back then, the 5Dmk3 was still the top full frame (aside from the 1Dx2 and the Nikon D4) and I remember feeling like the 7D2 was just amazing. After several years of shooting with it, I'm so glad I took your recommendation on it. As amazing as these new cameras are, I'm still so happy with the performance and abilities of that "old" camera. I hope that when people watch your videos and they hear y'all talk about "invest in better lenses before getting a different camera body," they actually listen. I still get the t3i out on occasion to let someone else shoot with it, and when I lend them a nice L lens, they are much happier with their results than if I give them one of the more "basic" lenses like a 55-250. My wife has a 6D, and even it still holds up really well for what we do with it. We've even taken it to a motorsports event and while it didn't perform like the 7Dmk2, it still did way better than we thought it would at tracking the vehicles and getting the shots we wanted with it.
I was all set to move from a T3i to a 90D and the guy at Hunt Camera in Melrose, MA gently steered me to the R7. After watching this video it was totally the right purchase! Can’t wait to get the battery charged to start shooting. Both the still and the moving tips for birds were perfect. Thank you! Love knowing that I can preset the setting for each condition. Also, love your presentation, clear, not hyped, and seriously informative! As for the best tip? Moving the stop down a few click for egrets, etc. makes prefect sense. Thank you for that! BTW - You have a new subscriber! ✌️
Great video. Just starting to get interested in wildlife photography and that has given me lots of tips . Keep the videos coming as they always s joy to watch.
Probably the tenth time I've watched tis, this time I was after the detail of customizing buttons, I had done some, but it was the problem of clutter I was trying to solve, if the bird is surrounded by branches etc, the camera wants to focus anywhere but on the bird, so hopefully this setting for back button and * button will solve this.
Hi Guys, Nice video, my tip is for adjusting exposure compensation: I use a custom controls setting to assign exposure compensation to the set button so then I can press the set button anytime and scroll the multi function wheel left or right for negative or positive exposure compensation. Thanks Noel
I rented the R7 last weekend for a soccer tournament. I loved it but there were some things I noticed that I didn’t like. Once owning one, maybe I’d get use to it. 1. Settings like Raw Burst Mode, that didn’t stay on. I had to go back in and enable it again. Not sure if that’s normal or a glitch. 2. Other than Canon DPP I think it was, that software was the only software that would open the CR3 burst files. That software is clunky in that, if you wanted to view the burst shots, you have to go through a few steps to open that sort of file. Then, you could scroll through but can only save one file at a time. That is crazy as each burst could be 30 photos. The photo software companies need to catch up. Even Lightroom’s latest upgrade won’t touch this file. I had turned on the people tracking but never did see the blue box. I was getting a white box around a persons head that I could move from person to person. The R7 does take amazing pictures and I’ll likely purchase one if I don’t end up liking the R5 better. I plan to rent the R5 with the same RF 100-500 lens.
I recommend using the fastest uhs-2 sd-cards you have, to minimize the time the camera buffers. At first, I used an uhs-1 v60 sd-card and it took a while till i could take pictures again, with the new card i can shoot raw with almost no downtime due to buffering.
Kingfishers and common yellowthroats are both contrarians. They taunt me every time I go out looking for them ... Oh yes, and thank you Chelsea and Tony for this excellent video!
Great video.. thanks for that... now all I need is for my R7 to arrive. Will be using it with the 400 F5.6, hopihng the IBIS will make it less finicky to use.
oh great idea! I love that 400 f/5.6 EXCEPT for the stabilization and it didn't occur to me that the R7 fixes that problem. I'll have to try out the combo again!
I'd love to see how you get on - my body when I get it will come with the EF adapter - it would be great to see what extent it can improve the experience. I broke the bank buying the R7 (upgrade from the 70D - which has not been stellar with the AF) and I'm hoping the 400 will be more usable with slower shutter speeds. Even at 1/500 it's touch and go to get a sharp picture on the 70D. And I'm also hoping that the noise performance is improved. But the AF looks amazing, I'm really looking forward to that..
HI, great tutorial. Having a bit of trouble setting the back button focus at 18:45 on the video. I get to setting the * button but can’t seem to find the “AF area” tab to set the “whole area”. Can you forward along a step by step from just before that point on? Thanks!
Nice work! Would’ve been interesting to see what your choices are for case settings on birds and flight. Thanks for making this video about the new best bang for the buck bird photography camera out there. I guess it’s time to tell your neighbor to sell his D500. 😂
D500 still has better lens choices & produces less noice 😬 canon lenses with F7.1 will never be as useful as something like a Nikon 500mm F5.6. So no, it’s not time :)
I just bought the R7 and after taking a few test shots tried to process them using the latest version of Canon's Digital Photo Professional 4. I found that DDP 4 had a difficult time dealing with the CR3 files that this camera creates. Then the photo displayer I have used for over 15 years, Irfanview, could not accept CR3 files. I love Irfanview. I thought perhaps some of your members and viewers might not know this about the R7. The issue of Canon's creating an entirely new RAW file format is NEVER mentioned in any review of this, or the other R series cameras, that I've seen. Perhaps this is because all of these reviewers use Lightroom to process all of their photos so they've never dealt with this issue? For me, after struggling all last evening to format the camera using very different dials and Q setup, this issue with the CR3 was a deal breaker for me. This camera and the RF 100-500mm lens I bought with it are, unfortunately, going back to B&H Photo for a refund. I'll stay with my dSLRs (two 7D Mk 2s and 60D, and will be looking for their replacements as the number of shutter activations on the 7Ds are getting up there).
While carrying the camera, do you recommend holding the Camera body with a large and heavy lens or holding by the Lens to avoid any bends on the lens mount? During the video, I could see most of the the camera was carried by the body, not by the 100-500 lens which is about 1.5kgs in weight! Examples: 14:5015:02
Always support the lens especially a big heavy lens with your left hand whilst shooting and when carrying hold the lens mount not the camera. It's very easy to break the lens mount, my 7D mark ii was in a well padded bag with a EF100-400ii lens and 1.4x TC attached when I dropped it (only about 30cm or 1 foot) and the TC snapped in half but fortunately the lens and camera survived.
@@noelchignell1048 exactly, that's what my understanding is. But in this video I can see them carrying the camera by body, not by lens. Examples around 14:50 and 15:02
@@noelchignell1048 Well, they don't use a TC which IMO tend to be more fragile than the direct connection from lens to camera. I think Noel without your TC, your kit would have been fine? Since the TC broke rather than anything else. You should be able to hold a 1.5 - 2kg lens just on a body for some time, especially a strong Mg-alloy-body. Just be careful with a 6 kg lens, or a plastic body, and don't shoot a lot like that. But as you can see in the video, she is holding it straight down, which is just fine for the camera - if you/she held it horizontally, there would be much more stress on the mount. You can hold such a camera+lens in that way for a long time before anything breaks.
@@toonfishbrot Chelsea frequently knocks big prime lenses just getting them out of the car and they just let the unprotected cameras and lenses travel loose in the boot (trunk) of their BMW, also often see them resting 600f/4 lenses on steel or wooden railings
I appreciate ya time with different cameras and your tutorials on a bunch too! Would be dope to see a video of ya using different adapted ef lenses on the r7. I was so excited getting my first L lens (70-200 f4 is 1) that worked great with my t7i but seems to miss focus all the time with the r7, and cant afford to test many other lenses
I can’t tell you how excited I am to have the opportunity to call Milford Photo in Connecticut whenever I have a camera question. I’m sure they will absolutely appreciate my random inquiries even though I live halfway across the country, buy all my gear at B&H and could just as easily get the answer to my questions on Facebook.
Great info & video as I’m a beginner and just received my R7! I have a question for Chelsea though, You spoke to using both the * AND the AF-ON buttons. Then customized the * button, but didn’t customize the AF-ON button. Is that because it’s default is already where you want it? What function setting should the AF-ON button be set on for moving birds? Thanks again, I love all of your channel content.
I don't have Lightroom and will never rent it. Currently I have Corel AfterShot Pro which doesn't support RAW files at this time so I'm stuck using Canon's DPP4 which is terrible and extremely limited. That leaves me editing jpeg files only. I'm pretty happy with what I'm getting so far. It would be nice to have the budget to have the L 100-500 lens and use Lightroom, but those are not even remotely an option for me. Thanks for the settings advice! I will try them!
Planning to go birding in Papua. Should I get Canon R7 with RF 100-500mm lens or Sony with 200-600mm lens? Will be taking still photos n videos of the Birds of Paradise. Lighting might not be good.
Enjoyed the video. I do have a question about using the camera with my Sigma 150-600mm lens. I have a hard time hand holding this lens so I usually put it on a tripod. Do you recommend shutting off the image stabilization when on the tripod? I hear differing opinions on this. I have tried it on and off and truthfully, I don't see any difference.
great question. how are you finding the 150-600? I have the same set up, I'm finding a lot of flickering whereby you can't focus and have to zoom back in, catch focus and then slowly zoom back out... happens often for me. curious if you have that happen as well?
Shooting in RAW or C-RAW should be dependent on whether your RAW photo editor of choice, and yes, people are allowed to make a choice other than Adobe, can open and edit C-RAW files.
Hi ive got a canon 5 d mkiv , 5d mkii Canon 80d I also have sigma 150-600 contemporary - canon 400 mm prime - canon 70-200 usm - tamron 18-400 the question is im going to Africa what do you think would be the best combo - i also have canon M cameras with the 200mm lens ? Any help would be great i dint want to go to Africa and get bad photos im pretty competent but would appreciate your advice
I bought a nikon Z50 as my first camera last year, and I want to focus more on wildlife photography and the 50-250mm lens just isn't enough reach. I'm stuck between just picking up a new lens for the Z50, like the F mount 300 f/4 or 200-500 f/5.6 (which I feel like might be too large), or just getting the R7 with the RF 100-400mm (which is still cheaper than the Nikon Z telephoto lenses by themselves). I'm also tempted to wait and see if any info gets released on the Nikon Z 200-600 which is supposed to be a more budget friendly option, but it's been like 2 years since it was added to the lens roadmap and nothing new has been revealed. I have no idea what I'm going to pick at this point
Since i used already a EOS RP... i just got a RF 800 F11 2nd hand. Tried a 150-600mm sigma, but the focus breathing is too annoying and would mess up too many shots, also with a 1,4x TC, the apertures isnt much bigger anymore compared to the 800 F11 at the longer end. As much i would have loved the versatility of a telezoom lens, especially the ones with 100-150mm on the lower focal range (to completely replace my 75-300mm i used on APS-C so 120-480mm), i just could not. 3rd party lenses have focus breathing in AF-C, original canon lenses like the 100-500L are too expensive, the 100-400 is "too weak" for its price too, so there was just the option to go for a RF 600 or 800mm F11.
OM-1 is too good. 😉 5 months and 350,000 shots. With Firmware 1.2 it's really incredible. But I don't photograph birds, only motorsport. BIF? Check out Mike Lane Frps video "om1 or the sony a1." Mike uses the om-1 with old firmware in his test, but you can learn a lot about camera and bird photography from his video. He's a great bird photographer.
@@TonyAndChelsea Unfortunately, the Om system does not exist in the USA. In Italy, Spain, Germany, Denmark and Poland, the Om is doing very well. When it comes to the availability of cameras, it's not good anywhere. I bought z9 myself and sold it after 3 weeks without any loss. Madness.
Haven't seen any mention of a vertical grip for the R7, or did I miss it ?? I shoot sports for the local high school & shoot vertically almost half the time.
what aspect ratio should i set the R7 too from start it is 3,2 whit the rf 100-500 and the same whit a ef tele,when i put the rf 100-500 on my R6 it is set too full but when i put an ef lens on it changes it auto too 1,6, the R7 does not change the settings ,what aspect rario should i set the R7 too
Thank you! I cut my teeth years ago on the Canon AE-1, joined the mirrorless club nearly 10 years ago with the Sony a6000, and now I'm thrilled to be back with Canon via the amazing R7. Your clear, no nonsense videos have been one of my favorite guides and I hope will continue to be.
Great video. My favourite tip is don’t put the camera away until you are about to get into your car. The bird you want might be in a tree right next to your car in the car park. How do I know this…
Thank you Chelsea and Tony for this tutorial. In the next few month I will "upgrade" from my beloved 7D2 to the R7 but I will stay with my EF L lenses, the 70-200 L f/2.8 and f/4 and 100-400 L USMII and mz 1.4x and 2x extenders. My 7D2 will stay as a backup camera - I never ever sell this great peace of camera! I have learned making wildlife phtotography with this camera lenses. My main subjects are rabbits, squirrels and so on. Hope the eze fokus system detects this animals as well as birds. Thank you both for all your great content that helps me very much, thank you. And I will looking forward for all your new videos here on YT.
Thanks for the R7 review. Been a photographer since 1973 using a bunch of classic film cams. Now I own a R7. You guys rock.
Brilliant video. This video is priceless to those new to Wildlife and will help you far better than buying a more expensive camera and not fully understanding how the key photographic features work. Ian (UK)
Great review, I have been shooting animals in general for years. Shot with Rebel, the D7 Mark II and now, I finally got R7 and love the camera. Haven't been able to get out to shoot the wildlife yet, because of how busy we have been, but did shoot some dogs and it is amazing, how the camera captures fast with great focus and great light. I absolutely love the outcome of this amazing camera and the price tag is very good, for this specific camera as well. Thank you for reconfirming that this is a great camera in general, but most importantly for the wildlife, which I am still going to try it on with variety of species and lenses, hence macro and telephoto to capture variety of wildlife.
Thank you!! I'm finally making the leap into Mirrorless and your videos help differentiate the cameras, and this video in particular, shows me why I want to use certain settings, not just tell me settings to use. Bird photography is one of my favotire subjects to shoot. I've used Canon for years.
Thank you for this tutorial! I've had the R7 for close to a year now, but haven't tried too much bird photography. But my biggest takeaway, my personal "A-HA!" moment had nothing to do with birding, but was learning how to save the settings in a Custom profile!
Great tips! For perched birds, silence, so electronic shutter. For birds inflight, 1st curtain shutter to avoid the rolling shutter problem associated with electronic shutter. However the RAW burst and pre-shooting features, which promise to up your chances of capturing quick, unexpected moments requires use of electronic shutter.
A very underrated wildlifephotography tip is to ALWAYS bring a camera with you
Shame this one isn't available xD
None in UK shops, pre-orders still arent close to being fulfilled.
Excellent video! I'm moving on from a Nikon D5600 (and I'm still pretty new to that), and as everyone has told me, "there's gonna be a steep learning curve." Both Tony and Chelsea's tips are excellent introductions to bird photography with this camera. The most useful tips for me at this moment are setting up the eye autofocus, setting back-button autofocus (I always use it) and setting up exposure compensation for light-colored birds against a light background. The LEAST useful (for me) is the recommendation for a $13 k lens! One thing that might have been worth exploring is the use of non RF lenses with appropriate adapters.
There is no doubt that these new cameras are pretty incredible. Years ago (well, a few) I was watching y'all review the 7Dmk2 when I was getting ready to upgrade from my t3i. Back then, the 5Dmk3 was still the top full frame (aside from the 1Dx2 and the Nikon D4) and I remember feeling like the 7D2 was just amazing. After several years of shooting with it, I'm so glad I took your recommendation on it. As amazing as these new cameras are, I'm still so happy with the performance and abilities of that "old" camera. I hope that when people watch your videos and they hear y'all talk about "invest in better lenses before getting a different camera body," they actually listen. I still get the t3i out on occasion to let someone else shoot with it, and when I lend them a nice L lens, they are much happier with their results than if I give them one of the more "basic" lenses like a 55-250. My wife has a 6D, and even it still holds up really well for what we do with it. We've even taken it to a motorsports event and while it didn't perform like the 7Dmk2, it still did way better than we thought it would at tracking the vehicles and getting the shots we wanted with it.
My R7 has arrived and my RF 100-500 is inbound! I am replacing a 7DMK II. Can’t wait to get out there. Thanks for the great info.
Thanks for sharing another wonderful video like always, I am super happy that I got my new R7 yesterday, I love the camera, it's awesome 📸❤️🐦
Big fan of these guys. They always have great tutorials.
I was all set to move from a T3i to a 90D and the guy at Hunt Camera in Melrose, MA gently steered me to the R7. After watching this video it was totally the right purchase! Can’t wait to get the battery charged to start shooting. Both the still and the moving tips for birds were perfect. Thank you! Love knowing that I can preset the setting for each condition. Also, love your presentation, clear, not hyped, and seriously informative! As for the best tip? Moving the stop down a few click for egrets, etc. makes prefect sense. Thank you for that! BTW - You have a new subscriber! ✌️
Great video on the R7 camera and bird photography tips! Thanks Tony an Chelsea!
Great video. Just starting to get interested in wildlife photography and that has given me lots of tips .
Keep the videos coming as they always s joy to watch.
I came to this video looking for details about the R7. I don't know how good is the camera but you are too good for sure. 👍🕊️
Uno de los videos mejor explicados que he visto. Muchas gracias por trasmitir tu experiencia.
Thank you Tony and Chelsea for a first-class video as always.
I got the sigma 70 200 for my t8i a few weeks ago and I just pointed it at a bird on a roof and I was truly impressed
Love! And even love your love for birds and being outdoors and taking pictures of them.
This is one of the best camera videos for style and information on UA-cam.
Probably the tenth time I've watched tis, this time I was after the detail of customizing buttons, I had done some, but it was the problem of clutter I was trying to solve, if the bird is surrounded by branches etc, the camera wants to focus anywhere but on the bird, so hopefully this setting for back button and * button will solve this.
Thanks Tony and Chelsea. Most appreciated.
Excellent tutorial. Exemplifies how helpful a photography video can be. Thanks 😊
Great wildlife photography tutorial. Tony and Chelsea you are the best !!!
R7🔥 100-400 rf usm lens 🔥🔥powerfull combination 👌🏻
Great tips and thanks to you I was able to get my R7 sooner than I expected from Milford Photo!
Glad to hear it!
This is the best, most helpful video I've seen on this. Thank you!! And you both are so enjoyable to watch.
Really found this video helpful in so many ways, such clear explanations on how to change settings and why. THANK YOU!
wonderful video . Thanks Tony & Chelsea
Thank you for the great review from a beginner in the Netherlands
Hi Guys,
Nice video, my tip is for adjusting exposure compensation:
I use a custom controls setting to assign exposure compensation to the set button so then I can press the set button anytime and scroll the multi function wheel left or right for negative or positive exposure compensation.
Thanks
Noel
I enjoy watching top notch videos. ❤❤❤ Super great job. ❤❤❤ Thanks for sharing this with us.
Thank you Tony and Chelsea! Very helpfull
Great tutorial Chelsea. 👌
I rented the R7 last weekend for a soccer tournament. I loved it but there were some things I noticed that I didn’t like. Once owning one, maybe I’d get use to it.
1. Settings like Raw Burst Mode, that didn’t stay on. I had to go back in and enable it again. Not sure if that’s normal or a glitch.
2. Other than Canon DPP I think it was, that software was the only software that would open the CR3 burst files. That software is clunky in that, if you wanted to view the burst shots, you have to go through a few steps to open that sort of file. Then, you could scroll through but can only save one file at a time. That is crazy as each burst could be 30 photos. The photo software companies need to catch up. Even Lightroom’s latest upgrade won’t touch this file.
I had turned on the people tracking but never did see the blue box. I was getting a white box around a persons head that I could move from person to person.
The R7 does take amazing pictures and I’ll likely purchase one if I don’t end up liking the R5 better. I plan to rent the R5 with the same RF 100-500 lens.
I recommend using the fastest uhs-2 sd-cards you have, to minimize the time the camera buffers.
At first, I used an uhs-1 v60 sd-card and it took a while till i could take pictures again, with the new card i can shoot raw with almost no downtime due to buffering.
the customize button and pre focusing tip
Kingfishers and common yellowthroats are both contrarians. They taunt me every time I go out looking for them ... Oh yes, and thank you Chelsea and Tony for this excellent video!
chelsea part is the best part!
EXCELENTE, IMPORTANTE Y DE GRAN AYUDA TODA LA INFORMACION !!! GRACIAS !!!
Great video.. thanks for that... now all I need is for my R7 to arrive. Will be using it with the 400 F5.6, hopihng the IBIS will make it less finicky to use.
oh great idea! I love that 400 f/5.6 EXCEPT for the stabilization and it didn't occur to me that the R7 fixes that problem. I'll have to try out the combo again!
I'd love to see how you get on - my body when I get it will come with the EF adapter - it would be great to see what extent it can improve the experience. I broke the bank buying the R7 (upgrade from the 70D - which has not been stellar with the AF) and I'm hoping the 400 will be more usable with slower shutter speeds. Even at 1/500 it's touch and go to get a sharp picture on the 70D. And I'm also hoping that the noise performance is improved. But the AF looks amazing, I'm really looking forward to that..
Great tutorial!!! How did you get the touch screen exposure compensation setting please ?
CANON is KING! Always has been! 💪
Damn, that is a lot of action in this video.
This video is so helpful!!!
aprendí muchísimo! sacarle el jugo a la R7, thnks!
HI, great tutorial. Having a bit of trouble setting the back button focus at 18:45 on the video. I get to setting the * button but can’t seem to find the “AF area” tab to set the “whole area”. Can you forward along a step by step from just before that point on? Thanks!
Great stuff! Thanks for this!
Nice work! Would’ve been interesting to see what your choices are for case settings on birds and flight. Thanks for making this video about the new best bang for the buck bird photography camera out there. I guess it’s time to tell your neighbor to sell his D500. 😂
D500 still has better lens choices & produces less noice 😬 canon lenses with F7.1 will never be as useful as something like a Nikon 500mm F5.6. So no, it’s not time :)
I just bought the R7 and after taking a few test shots tried to process them using the latest version of Canon's Digital Photo Professional 4. I found that DDP 4 had a difficult time dealing with the CR3 files that this camera creates. Then the photo displayer I have used for over 15 years, Irfanview, could not accept CR3 files. I love Irfanview.
I thought perhaps some of your members and viewers might not know this about the R7. The issue of Canon's creating an entirely new RAW file format is NEVER mentioned in any review of this, or the other R series cameras, that I've seen. Perhaps this is because all of these reviewers use Lightroom to process all of their photos so they've never dealt with this issue?
For me, after struggling all last evening to format the camera using very different dials and Q setup, this issue with the CR3 was a deal breaker for me. This camera and the RF 100-500mm lens I bought with it are, unfortunately, going back to B&H Photo for a refund. I'll stay with my dSLRs (two 7D Mk 2s and 60D, and will be looking for their replacements as the number of shutter activations on the 7Ds are getting up there).
Great tutorial. Thank you.
I am from SRi Lanka Tamil BUT yours' speaking I understand sir ✅
Lots of great tips!
While carrying the camera, do you recommend holding the Camera body with a large and heavy lens or holding by the Lens to avoid any bends on the lens mount?
During the video, I could see most of the the camera was carried by the body, not by the 100-500 lens which is about 1.5kgs in weight!
Examples: 14:50 15:02
Always support the lens especially a big heavy lens with your left hand whilst shooting and when carrying hold the lens mount not the camera. It's very easy to break the lens mount, my 7D mark ii was in a well padded bag with a EF100-400ii lens and 1.4x TC attached when I dropped it (only about 30cm or 1 foot) and the TC snapped in half but fortunately the lens and camera survived.
@@noelchignell1048 exactly, that's what my understanding is. But in this video I can see them carrying the camera by body, not by lens. Examples around 14:50 and 15:02
These guys are entertaining and their videos are educational but they are super careless with camera gear
@@noelchignell1048 Well, they don't use a TC which IMO tend to be more fragile than the direct connection from lens to camera. I think Noel without your TC, your kit would have been fine? Since the TC broke rather than anything else.
You should be able to hold a 1.5 - 2kg lens just on a body for some time, especially a strong Mg-alloy-body. Just be careful with a 6 kg lens, or a plastic body, and don't shoot a lot like that.
But as you can see in the video, she is holding it straight down, which is just fine for the camera - if you/she held it horizontally, there would be much more stress on the mount. You can hold such a camera+lens in that way for a long time before anything breaks.
@@toonfishbrot Chelsea frequently knocks big prime lenses just getting them out of the car and they just let the unprotected cameras and lenses travel loose in the boot (trunk) of their BMW, also often see them resting 600f/4 lenses on steel or wooden railings
I appreciate ya time with different cameras and your tutorials on a bunch too! Would be dope to see a video of ya using different adapted ef lenses on the r7. I was so excited getting my first L lens (70-200 f4 is 1) that worked great with my t7i but seems to miss focus all the time with the r7, and cant afford to test many other lenses
Very helpfull Video!
Great video, thank you.
This is sooo good. Thank you Chelsea & Tony. 🦘🇦🇺
Great tips! Thanks!
I can’t tell you how excited I am to have the opportunity to call Milford Photo in Connecticut whenever I have a camera question. I’m sure they will absolutely appreciate my random inquiries even though I live halfway across the country, buy all my gear at B&H and could just as easily get the answer to my questions on Facebook.
Great tutorials. Keep it up! 👍
Absolutely awesome 🤩
Have been waiting this video..!!
Which focus point should've use to take pictures of flying birds or a running Cheetah in both parallal & face to face respectively !?
Thanks for sharing 👍🏼
thank you for the video..
Great Video.
Great info & video as I’m a beginner and just received my R7! I have a question for Chelsea though, You spoke to using both the * AND the AF-ON buttons. Then customized the * button, but didn’t customize the AF-ON button. Is that because it’s default is already where you want it? What function setting should the AF-ON button be set on for moving birds?
Thanks again, I love all of your channel content.
Chelsea is defiantly getting buffed by holding all of these telescopic canon lenses in the thumb nail.
I don't have Lightroom and will never rent it. Currently I have Corel AfterShot Pro which doesn't support RAW files at this time so I'm stuck using Canon's DPP4 which is terrible and extremely limited. That leaves me editing jpeg files only. I'm pretty happy with what I'm getting so far. It would be nice to have the budget to have the L 100-500 lens and use Lightroom, but those are not even remotely an option for me. Thanks for the settings advice! I will try them!
Too good tutorial
FIRST! 😀Thanks for the extensive Canon coverage T&C.
Planning to go birding in Papua. Should I get Canon R7 with RF 100-500mm lens or Sony with 200-600mm lens? Will be taking still photos n videos of the Birds of Paradise. Lighting might not be good.
on a r5 would you recommend the older canon EF 500 F4 lenses? for birds
Can I use my EF 70-200 f2.8 lens with an adapter ? For motorsports photography
I have to say the Kingfishers in the UK are more gorgeous! :-) some good photos there though.
What is the location where Chelsea joins this video at the 13.52 mark, the "boxed in" wooden structure?
Enjoyed the video. I do have a question about using the camera with my Sigma 150-600mm lens. I have a hard time hand holding this lens so I usually put it on a tripod. Do you recommend shutting off the image stabilization when on the tripod? I hear differing opinions on this. I have tried it on and off and truthfully, I don't see any difference.
great question. how are you finding the 150-600? I have the same set up, I'm finding a lot of flickering whereby you can't focus and have to zoom back in, catch focus and then slowly zoom back out... happens often for me. curious if you have that happen as well?
thank you for helping me set up my new R7
I would LOVE a walkthrough with time stamps as you did with the Sony a7ii. Still waiting for my R7. Pre-ordered when it was first announced.
We have a full tutorial for the R7 that should be out next week!
@@TonyAndChelsea Yes!!!!
@@GoldtriggerDude What’s the verdict? 🤷♂️ I bought my R7 this past Friday. 😊
And which lens should fit the camera both close and far? Is the RF 18-150mm kit lens the most suitable for the camera?
Any comments on how R7 combines with sigma 150 600 ef lens... With adapters
Shooting in RAW or C-RAW should be dependent on whether your RAW photo editor of choice, and yes, people are allowed to make a choice other than Adobe, can open and edit C-RAW files.
DXO PureRaw2 doesn't support C-RAW files as of a week ago.
I have the Tamron 150-600 G2 and I find that 600 is too much, and often zoom out to 400. It let's in more light and I get better results.
Tony&chelsea Thank you very much for the very professional explanations, I would like your advice on whether I should buy the R7 or R8
r7 for wildlife, r8 for portrait and videos
@@truthseeker6804 R7 not good for trip white my family?
Very instructive video. Thanks for giving very useful tips.
Hi ive got a canon 5 d mkiv , 5d mkii Canon 80d I also have sigma 150-600 contemporary - canon 400 mm prime - canon 70-200 usm - tamron 18-400 the question is im going to Africa what do you think would be the best combo - i also have canon M cameras with the 200mm lens ? Any help would be great i dint want to go to Africa and get bad photos im pretty competent but would appreciate your advice
R7 not good for trip with my family? I bought the R7 camera with the kit lens, is it suitable for a trip with the family in nature?
I bought a nikon Z50 as my first camera last year, and I want to focus more on wildlife photography and the 50-250mm lens just isn't enough reach. I'm stuck between just picking up a new lens for the Z50, like the F mount 300 f/4 or 200-500 f/5.6 (which I feel like might be too large), or just getting the R7 with the RF 100-400mm (which is still cheaper than the Nikon Z telephoto lenses by themselves). I'm also tempted to wait and see if any info gets released on the Nikon Z 200-600 which is supposed to be a more budget friendly option, but it's been like 2 years since it was added to the lens roadmap and nothing new has been revealed. I have no idea what I'm going to pick at this point
Since i used already a EOS RP... i just got a RF 800 F11 2nd hand. Tried a 150-600mm sigma, but the focus breathing is too annoying and would mess up too many shots, also with a 1,4x TC, the apertures isnt much bigger anymore compared to the 800 F11 at the longer end.
As much i would have loved the versatility of a telezoom lens, especially the ones with 100-150mm on the lower focal range (to completely replace my 75-300mm i used on APS-C so 120-480mm), i just could not. 3rd party lenses have focus breathing in AF-C, original canon lenses like the 100-500L are too expensive, the 100-400 is "too weak" for its price too, so there was just the option to go for a RF 600 or 800mm F11.
I miss the days when Chelsea used her D850 for wildlife. Bring back that Chelsea! lol
Thanks for an fine video. What happened to the promised review of the new OM-1?
OM-1 is too good. 😉 5 months and 350,000 shots. With Firmware 1.2 it's really incredible. But I don't photograph birds, only motorsport.
BIF? Check out Mike Lane Frps video "om1 or the sony a1." Mike uses the om-1 with old firmware in his test, but you can learn a lot about camera and bird photography from his video. He's a great bird photographer.
It's still not available unfortunately.
@@TonyAndChelsea Thanks for the your answer. I will just have to wait a bit longer then :)
@@kamilrakowski23 Thanks for the tip. I Will check it out.
@@TonyAndChelsea Unfortunately, the Om system does not exist in the USA. In Italy, Spain, Germany, Denmark and Poland, the Om is doing very well. When it comes to the availability of cameras, it's not good anywhere. I bought z9 myself and sold it after 3 weeks without any loss. Madness.
Haven't seen any mention of a vertical grip for the R7, or did I miss it ?? I shoot sports for the local high school & shoot vertically almost half the time.
You're out of luck. There's not going to be one. A used R6 would be a better bet for the shooting you describe and you can get a battery grip with it.
100-400mm, then buy waders and a hide for a lot less than the 100-500mm. Tony - half-press shutter? did you forget or go off BBF?
what aspect ratio should i set the R7 too from start it is 3,2 whit the rf 100-500 and the same whit a ef tele,when i put the rf 100-500 on my R6 it is set too full but when i put an ef lens on it changes it auto too 1,6, the R7 does not change the settings ,what aspect rario should i set the R7 too
Thanks for the information, What is the card you recommend for this camera for bird photography?
It should be a UHS-II card but we haven't done side-by-side comparisons.
Pictures shot at f/11 will introduce diffraction unsharpness which starts at f/5,2. How can this deliver tack sharp pictures?