Hi there,
I'm Lillian Stokes, prominent American bird author and photographer who, along with my husband Don, have written 35 best-selling books on birds and nature including the best-selling and one of the most comprehensive photographic field guides ever written, The Stokes Field Guide to the Birds of North America.
News Flash: My new book, The Stokes Essential Pocket Guide to the Birds of North America is just published! It has fantastic large photos and covers 250 North American bird species. At just the right size, you can slip it in your pocket when you go out to photograph birds. Get this book, it is perfect for beginning and intermediate birders and spring migration is starting now. Amazingly, two of the main photos in this book were taken with my Canon SX 50! Here they are, this Western Kingbird and this House Wren.
Western Kingbird
House Wren
Buy Now! The Stokes Essential Pocket Guide to Birds of North America
By the way, Canon does not pay me to say nice things about the SX 50 and I am not paid by Canon to endorse this camera. I just happen to have gotten the camera, like it, and want to tell you about it you in the hopes that more of you will come to enjoy birds and photography because of this camera. The more people become attached to birds the more they will want to conserve them. Over 70,000 viewers have read my original post and I know thousands have gotten this camera and are enjoying it. This camera has converted many people to bird enthusiasts.
For now, the information below is all about the Canon SX 50 HS. By the way, DO NOT get the new Canon SX 60!! It is NOT GOOD for bird photography, see my review here. Instead, get the Canon SX 50 while they are still available.
Just for fun, here is a photo I took last winter with the Canon SX 50, from a car, of a preening Snowy Owl on the NH coast.
Here's my original post written Feb. 1, 2013,
Warning! Reading this blog post could cost you money. I just got the new Canon SX 50 HS point and shoot super-zoom camera and I love it. It's in my right hand, my Canon 1D Mark IV with the 300mm lens and 1.4 teleconverter is in my left hand. The SX 50 HS has a 12.1 megapixel back-illuminated CMOS sensor, DIGIC 5 image processor, image stabilization, ISO 80-6400. The focal length when optical and digital zoom are combined is as follows (35 mm equivalent) 24-4800 mm (24-1200mm with optical zoom alone.) It can shoot RAW. Here are some of the reasons why I like the SX 50 HS.
It shoots birds in flight fairly easily in Sports Mode, as I found out yesterday when I tried it out on Brown Pelicans and got this photo.
Or how about this photo of a White Pelican I took recently.
Recently I took the Canon SX 50 for a test spin to Harn's Marsh in FL. See the ducks in the pond near the far shore?
Here are the ducks zoomed in a little closer, they look like black spots.
Now here are the Ring-necked Ducks photographed with the lens zoomed all the way in, past the optical zoom range, into digital zoom of 200x. Camera was set on Smart Auto photo is untouched.
There were a number of other birds that were just too far away for my other DSLR cameras, such as this Limpkin in the far cattails.
The Limpkin was preening then stretched.
This Black-crowned Night-Heron was way out of the reach of my usual cameras. There is something immensely fun and powerful in being able to zoom in on very distant birds and get a photo.
The camera has great abililty just set on Smart Auto and people should have little problem photographing close, or relative close, birds in decent light. The harder part is hand holding the camera still when you are zoomed all the way, or a good part of the way, in on a bird. Many people may not want to or be able to do this, but that is where the fun is for me.
Here is my tip for steadying the camera while hand holding and shooting with the lens zoomed in closer on the bird. To steady the camera look through the viewfinder with the camera braced against your head. Do not shoot while looking through the back screen. Hold the barrel of the lens with your hand all the way out on the barrel and tuck your elbows against your body, making a tripod of your body. Try to hold as still as possible. Depress the shutter half way to focus on the bird, then take the photo quickly. If you then lose the bird in the viewfinder, zoom back out to give you just a wide enough field of view to find the bird again, zoom in, then get the bird in focus and take another photo.
To refined a bird you lost in the viewfinder, you can also use the uppermost button on the left had side of the camera near the base of the lens for Framing Assist-Seek. Hold this button down and the camera zooms out, allowing you find and reacquire the subject. Take multiple photos, some shots will be sharper than others.
Here is my tip for steadying the camera while hand holding and shooting with the lens zoomed in closer on the bird. To steady the camera look through the viewfinder with the camera braced against your head. Do not shoot while looking through the back screen. Hold the barrel of the lens with your hand all the way out on the barrel and tuck your elbows against your body, making a tripod of your body. Try to hold as still as possible. Depress the shutter half way to focus on the bird, then take the photo quickly. If you then lose the bird in the viewfinder, zoom back out to give you just a wide enough field of view to find the bird again, zoom in, then get the bird in focus and take another photo.
To refined a bird you lost in the viewfinder, you can also use the uppermost button on the left had side of the camera near the base of the lens for Framing Assist-Seek. Hold this button down and the camera zooms out, allowing you find and reacquire the subject. Take multiple photos, some shots will be sharper than others.
Another place we went recently was the Bailey Tract on Sanibel. See the Wilson's Snipe on the far shore?
Here it is with the camera zoomed in to 200x.
The Mottled Duck was closer than the snipe, see the dot in front of the island? I am standing on the bank taking the photo with the camera on 24mm.
Here is the Mottled Duck taken with camera on Smart Auto and the photo only slightly sharpened in photoshop.
There were Gulf Fritillary butterflies at my feet and it was so cool to be be able to take their photo as well as the distant birds.
The view from my back deck in my FL home. See the eagle?
Oh, here it is with the camera zoomed in...
Here it is zoomed even closer.
Note, with many of these photos I have pushed the camera to its limit at 200x and at this range, photo quality drops. I have steady hands so for me, it's fun to zoom all the way.
To get good photos, use the camera in good light and keep it in the optical zoom range of 24-1200 mm. This camera does best in good light and photo quality diminishes in low light. If you are really not steady, you could use the camera on a tripod, but I do not advise this.
To zoom closer to the bird, use the Digital Zoom which lets you apply up to 1.5 or 2x (up to 2400mm) worth of digital zoom beyond the optical zoom with a minimum drop in image quality, sort of like applying a 1.5 or 2x teleconverter. To access this feature on the regular camera menu, set the camera to AV or P mode and scroll down to where it says Digital Zoom and your choices are to set it at Off, 1.5x, 2.0x or Standard. Standard lets you zoom all the way in 200x, but there will be a loss of image quality at this far range. You can also use the "Framing Lock" button (on the bottom of the lens barrel) which helps stabilize the image when you take it.
To get good photos, use the camera in good light and keep it in the optical zoom range of 24-1200 mm. This camera does best in good light and photo quality diminishes in low light. If you are really not steady, you could use the camera on a tripod, but I do not advise this.
To zoom closer to the bird, use the Digital Zoom which lets you apply up to 1.5 or 2x (up to 2400mm) worth of digital zoom beyond the optical zoom with a minimum drop in image quality, sort of like applying a 1.5 or 2x teleconverter. To access this feature on the regular camera menu, set the camera to AV or P mode and scroll down to where it says Digital Zoom and your choices are to set it at Off, 1.5x, 2.0x or Standard. Standard lets you zoom all the way in 200x, but there will be a loss of image quality at this far range. You can also use the "Framing Lock" button (on the bottom of the lens barrel) which helps stabilize the image when you take it.
At these extreme zoom ranges, such as 200x, the photo quality is not usable for many things such as fine prints. However, for use on blogs, a facebook page, etc., and the internet, which only require photos of 72 dpi, these photos may be usable. Most of these photos I took had minimal processing just a little sharpening in photoshop. Images shot closer, at lower ISO and within the optical range would be much better. I mainly wanted to show some of the extreme things this camera is capable of.
Don't get me wrong. The Canon SX 50 HS does not produce the same quality images that DSLR cameras do and you should consider purchasing these if you want high quality images. I really like my Canon 1D Mark IV (shown here) and I have gotten incredible photos with it, many used on our national field guide, The Stokes Field Guide to the Birds of North America and our just published regional guides based on the national guide, The New Stokes Field Guide to Birds: Eastern and Western Region. I now use use the Canon 1D X or my new Canon 7D Mark II with a Canon 300mm IS lens and 1.4 teleconverter, or my Canon 500mm IS lens with 1.4 teleconverter, Gitzo 1325 Carbon Fiber Tripod and Whimberley head. The Canon SX 50 is not in the same league with the big, professional, or near professional DSLR equipment. Then again, it costs around $430 vs. the Canon 1D Mark IV originally cost around $5,000.
At Harn's Marsh I had my Mark IV with the 300 mm lens with 1.4x and in seconds got this Harrier shot. I could not have gotten this with the SX 50.
There is nothing like the thrill and adreneline rush of capturing something like this eagle landing with my 500mm lens and the high speed shooting ability of the Mark IV. You photographers with similar equipment who are reading this know what I mean. I now own the Canon 1D X which is even better than the Canon 1D Mark IV. I recently got and really like the Canon 7D Mark II.
However, the Canon SX 50 HS can make decent bird photographs within the reach of even a novice bird photographer just by shooting on Smart Auto, then Sports Mode for birds in flight. You can do even better if you learn to use it in AV mode. In the hands of more experienced photographers it can provide great fun and the ability to capture good bird photos, even when birds are impossibly far away. It will make getting record shots of birds more possible because the reach of the camera is so great. It may convert many to bird photographers/birders and give them a love for and appreciation of birds. That would be a great thing.
It is interesting to me that just about every birder, experienced bird photographer, or novice birder/photographer I have showed this camera to in the last week has said they want one. The light weight of the camera and ability to zoom in so close on a bird just blows people away.
There is so much more to say about this camera which does so many things. If you want my much, much, more extensive tips on this camera, including what setting to use and info. on bird photography, email me. Email link is on top right of this blog.
Make sure and read the complete original reviews here at,
Make sure and read the complete original reviews here at,
and
Here are some of my basic tips.
- Start with Smart Auto, especially if you are a beginner. It is excellent for many situations, especially if there is good light and the bird is not moving very fast. It may overexpose white birds.
- Even though this camera shoots, RAW, I do not use that much as most of the photos I take are for use on the internet, which uses lower resolution .jpeg images.
- You must read the manual, which you download to your computer as a PDF. Read it multiple times and learn all the dials and how to set the camera functions.
However, as I said, if you have this camera and want my much more extensive tips on how to use it, email me. Email link is on top right of this blog. The manual won't help you know which setting to use for bird photography.
If you are interested in photographing birds you need to accurately identify the birds you photograph, so get our field guides:
Our newest book is The Stokes Essential Pocket Guide to the Birds of North America, available now BUY Now! click here. So handy you can slip it in your pocket.
The Stokes Field Guide to the Birds of North America, the most complete photo guide available, which contains 3,500 stunning photos (many of them from me and other top bird photographers).
It is also available as regional guides,
These beautiful photographic guides are the best way to identify all the bird photos you take!!
Practice and most of all, have fun!!!
Lillian Stokes
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