Did you ever wonder how to take sharp, high-quality photos with your iPhone in low light, or a group shot with you in it? Whatever your goal, the camera timer found in the native camera app is most likely the solution. Read on to discover how your iPhone camera timer can help you take much better photos.

When the camera takes the photo using the timer, it actually uses Burst Mode to take 10 photos. The camera app chooses the best one, based on which is the least blurred, but you can choose to keep or discard any or all of the 10 photos in the iPhone photos app.


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An iPhone tripod, together with an iPhone tripod mount, can make a huge difference to the quality of your photos. It will help reduce the effects of camera shake caused by unsteady hands. This is especially true for low light situations where the shutter speed will be slower.

The iPhone camera timer is best used in scenarios where there is a large group of people, low lighting, or a combination of the two. Here are some of the most common scenarios where the camera timer can be really helpful, with exercises you can try:

Use a tripod and self-timer to photograph a gorgeous close-up object, such as a flower. This will help stabilize the shot and reduce any camera motion blur. Focus on certain details, such as water droplets, and see how close you can get to the object while keeping it in focus.

Ensure the intended subjects are in focus before pressing the shutter button. Next, tap and hold on the screen to lock focus. Try to ensure that all the subjects you want in focus are a similar distance away from the camera, as this will help keep everyone in focus.

Ok so I had the same problem and it drove me crazy trying to figure out what happened. If your phone says hold phone still and makes you wait 5 seconds before it takes the picture this might help you. I apparently had the night mode on. Make sure the moon shaped icon in the bottom right corner of the camera is white and not yellow. When it's white night mode is off and it should take pictures like normal. If night mode is on it will do the 5 second countdown.

In Self Timer mode the focus and exposure are being set the moment that the timer is triggered and is then locked in until the timer runs down and takes the photo.


It would be great if there was a setting that allows for continuous auto-adjusting of focus and exposure while the timer is running in order to track the subject. Often the self timer is being used to take photos alone, and the person taking the picture needs to move close to the camera to trigger the timer but then again move back into frame, so allowing to track the target and adjusting the focus / exposure would be awesome!


Making this a setting an on/off setting to either lock / auto adjust in self timer drive mode will be an awesome update across all firmwares that I think will be a huge improvement to usability.

That's definitely true that for professionals the current setting makes a lot of sense, but having an optional switch that tries to auto-focus / expose dynamically makes a lot of sense for more entry level use cases. 


The camera is great at keeping focus of faces and eye detection, or when shooting video, so I don't see why this can't be an optional setting to improve usability.

Well it's all software... pressing a button just means that the camera tries to find the best focus point in frame in that moment in time. I get that from a professional standpoint that control is important and necessary, but also the software in the camera should be perfectly capable to keep focus after pressing record, as it literally does this before pressing record as well...


To stay competitive with smart phone cameras that keep improving and that do all this stuff automatically, I do think allowing for such settings makes sense to give the user the choice of how they want to use the camera.


But I do see that you are being quite defensive over it, so if the manual way is how you want to approach things then that's fine, though a bit restrictive in my opinion...

Is there a setting that forces the camera to re-focus before each timed shot? I've tried switching to AI Servo, but it didn't help. I'm also aware I can use a Bluetooth/IR remote or connect the camera to my phone, but a simple timer is a lot easier and faster.

Most instruction manuals and 'how-to' books recommend using a dummy target the same distance as you plan to stand from the camera. You can either use AF (autofocus) to focus on it and then set the lens' switch to MF (manual focus) or set focus mode to MF and use the dummy target to manually focus on the spot you intend to stand.

Wi-Fi might not be simple or fast, but the BR-E1 remote is pretty simple and fast. It also allows you to do exactly what you want. It only needs to be set up once to be paired with your camera. After that it is probably easier and faster than messing with the timer each time you want to set up to do this would be, if the timer even allowed you to delay AF until right before the exposure is made.

The Wireless Remote Control BR-E1 uses the 77D's Bluetooth capability to allow a remote user to control AF, shutter actuation, and even starting/stopping video recording. It works with all Bluetooth capable Canon cameras.

A wireless remote controller compatible with Bluetooth enabled cameras for wireless focusing, still shooting and video recording, and zooming using the Power Zoom Adapter PZ-E1. Operating distance is approximately 16 ft in any direction.

Magic Lantern can do this, but it's unfortunately not available for the 77D. However, for people with a Canon camera that is supported Magic Lantern offers functionality that can focus while on a timer.

Alternatively you could use the audio remoteshot function in combination with the Use Autofocus setting to trigger the camera via a loud sound when you're in position. However, in my experience it's a bit finicky and the intervalometer is easier to use.

I don't think the dummy target approach adequately works for fast lenses (especially on full frame) and images viewed on a high-resolution screen where the depth of field can be mere centimeters. It may work adequately for a slow crop sensor kit zoom.

I'm not sure if 77D has this feature, but the EOS RP, which I recently bought, has an interval timer feature. For example, you can set an interval timer for 00:00:20 interval and 5 shots. When you press the shutter, the first picture is taken and then the camera will take the next pictures according to the interval you specified.

I just tested this "interval timer" feature on my EOS RP, and even in the one-shot AF mode (as opposed to servo AF), the interval timer autofocuses automatically prior to taking each picture. My test involved putting one object close to the camera and the other object twice as far from the camera. Then I alternately removed the close object and put it back. The nearest object in the scene was always the one the camera chose to focus at (both objects were around the autofocus point).

Note the interval timer is set in the camera menu. It's distinct from the self-timer (that can be set to take a picture after 2 seconds, take a picture after 10 seconds, or to take a burst of pictures after 10 seconds). If using the self-timer, focusing happens when half-pressing the shutter, so there's no option to focus after the timer expires. Also, self-timer has the drawback that you only have the choice between 2 and 10 seconds. Interval timer allows an arbitrary timer period.

Even the manual acknowledges this feature, but for some reason it suggests manual focusing: "Setting the lens focus mode switch to prevents the camera from shooting unless subjects are in focus. Setting it to and focusing manually before shooting is recommended."

Also, some cameras (like 2000D and EOS RP) can act as a Wi-Fi access point, allowing remote release using the Canon Android app. Then you just connect your smartphone to the camera, set up the camera (use selfie timer here so that you have time to put the phone to your pocket) and tripod, walk to the scene, use remote shutter release in the app, put the phone to the pocket during the self-timer and wait for the timer to expire. The app can show live view picture from the camera, so no tiltie-flippie LCD screen required.

I am new to canon and downloaded an app called camera connect ios, my camera is G7X Mark ii, once connect through wifi to my phone, I open the app and enter remote live view shooting mode, but there is no option for me to set the countdown timer.

This community is designed for your fellow Canon owners to help each other out with any problems they may encounter. We do hope someone is able to assist! If this is a time-sensitive matter, you can reach our US-based technical support team via email at Or if you're not in the United States, feel free to locate Canon technical support in your region at 


Thanks!

1.Connect your camera to the Camera Connect app.

2.Click on Remote Shooting.

3.Here, you will see a button on the bottom right of the device; tap it and you will be provided with different settings such as Shutter speed, Aperture, ISO, Continuous shooting and Self-timer.

4.Select the setting you want to change and scroll left or right to adjust it.

The instructions work for most phones and OS's, but it does vary from phone to phone and OS to OS. If you encounter an issue, please call our toll free technical support for more specific, real-time assistance.

Note that cameras usually come with this feature and perform beeps in the last 3/5 seconds to let the photographed user/s know when to smile, but dont hesitate to experiment because i personally think a camera flash would be a very good identifier for people that are far away from the phone,but i do wonder who takes these types of pictures these days.

If you were restricted by hardware then you probably wouldn't want to do any of this but, since you're using iOS and have existing hardware, why not allow the user to record their own sound to be played 1 second before the shutter release. This could be automatically cued so that the shutter fires 1 second after the recording has finished playing. You could even offer them a small library of sounds like bell dings, bleeps, mechanical noises, pre-recorded voices saying 'Smile!'... Turn the whole thing into a feature that adds value to your product! 152ee80cbc

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