In the days of film photography and manual cameras there was
no such thing as a “menu” of optional settings. We could set the film speed
then control aperture and shutter speed.
We could focus manually. We advanced the film after each exposure. After 36
exposures we rewound the film back into its cassette. And that was our lot. It was really very
simple. A bit slow and a bit limited by modern standards but really simple.
As cameras embraced electronic controls and digital capture
they became vastly more complex. Today’s models come with a 900 page
instruction manual and a mind boggling list of hundreds of user selected
settings.
This has led to a system of menus by which the user can make
their personal choice for each item.
Inevitably, early versions of menus were camera designer
techie-geek centric. Some early menu systems contained a plethora of items
which presumably made sense to some guy in the backrooms somewhere but were
totally confusing to the people actually trying to use the camera.
Camera menus have improved but are still a long way from
presenting a photographer-focussed approach to listing and navigating the
multitude of items now commonly provided.
This is the Camera Ergonomics blog so the vexed issue of
menus has long been on my agenda for thinking about and devising a better way.
In this post I present my suggested approach to an improved
menu layout using the items in my camera which is a Canon EOS R7.
I have drawn some inspiration for this proposal from the
menu system and layout featured in the current Hasselblad X2D100C cameras.
To keep things reasonably simple in this post I will just
look at the menu items which appear when the On/Off lever is set to ON (for
still photos) and the Mode Dial is set to Fv, Tv, Av, P or M.
A different set of menu items appear when the camera is set
to Movie (on this camera, using the ON/Off switch) or when the green Basic Zone
or SCN or Creative Filters settings are used on the Mode Dial, but I don’t want
to get into those in this post.
Canon has made some progress in framing their menu headings
in photographically meaningful ways. In The R7 we have separate headings
for [Autofocus], [Playback] and
[Connectivity]. But we still have
photographically meaningless headings such as [Camera, red], [Wrench, yellow] and [Camera,
orange].
In my proposed schema:
When we press the [Menu] button once, a screen like the one
below appears.
|
Quick
Control |
My Menu |
Exposure |
Focus |
Image |
Display |
|
Controls |
Drive |
Stabiliser |
Connectivity |
Power |
Storage |
|
Setup |
General |
Review |
Movie |
Framing |
Flash |
That is 18 locations. I envisage words in bold type over a
pictogram at each location.
There is plenty of space on the monitor screen for this
layout.
The first two are supplementary menus which will be visited
most often once the camera is set up to personal preference. Press an allocated
button once or the [Menu] button twice quickly to go straight to the [Quick
Control] Menu.
This is populated according to personal preference as is
current Canon practice.
[My Menu] is populated by the user according to personal
preference as is current practice.
Each of the other locations leads us to a photographically
meaningful set of menus and sub menus as required.
Anyone who already knows their way around a camera will
immediately understand the purpose of each location. Beginners will be able to
match an understanding of the menus with their growing knowledge of camera
functions. We always need a “general”
category for items which don’t fit elsewhere.
For the exercise I have re-allocated existing Canon R7 menus
items into my proposed photo logical categories.
I have also suggested some items which I think could safely
be removed from the menus as I have never used them and I have never read or
seen a setup advice which recommends setting these items to anything other than
default. Modern cameras have many
options which I suspect are there because they can be or because they have been
on the Canon menu list for several years without user review, not because anybody asked for them.
Exposure
At present, exposure items are
scattered about across several submenus.
Expo.Comp / AEB
ISO Speed settings
HDR Shooting HDR PQ
(remove)
HDR Mode (remove)
Auto Lighting Optimiser
Highlight Tone Priority
Anti flicker shooting
Metering Mode
White Balance
Custom White Balance
White Balance Shift Bkt (remove)
Color space
Multiple exposure
Silent shutter function
Shutter Mode (ms, efcs, es)
Release shutter W/O card
Exposure level increments
ISO speed setting increments
Speed from metering ISO Auto
Bracketing auto cancel
Bracketing sequence (remove)
Number of bracketed shots
Safety shift
Same exp for new aperture (remove)
AE Lock meter mode after focus (remove)
Set shutter speed range
Set aperture range
Focus
Most focus items have been
gathered into the [Autofocus] section but there are still some scattered about
elsewhere.
Focus bracketing
AF Operation
AF area
Subject tracking
Subject to detect
Eye detection
Switching tracked subjects
Focus mode
Servo AF options
One shot release priority
Preview AF (remove)
Lens drive when AF impossible
AF assist beam firing
Touch and drag AF settings
Limit AF Areas
* Sensitivity-AF Pt select
Orientation linked AF point
MF peaking settings
Focus guide
Electronic full time MF
Lens electronic MF
RF lens MF ring sensitivity
Image Clarify which apply to JPG and which to Raw
image capture
Image quality
Dual pixel Raw (remove)
Picture Style
Clarity (remove)
Shooting creative filters (remove from main menus)
Lens aberration correction
Long exposure noise reduction
High ISO speed noise reduction
Dust delete data
Display
Auto level
Display simulation
OVF Sim view assist (remove)
Shooting Info. Disp.
Reverse display
VF Display format
Display performance
Help text size
Mode Guide
Screen/VF display
Screen brightness
VF brightness
Screen/VF color tone
Fine tune VF color tone
UI Magnification
Copyright info.
Manual/Software URL
Certification Logo display
Firmware version
Show log
Add cropping information
Controls
Customize Quick Controls
Touch shutter (remove)
Focus ring rotation
Touch control
Multifunction lock
Switch AF/MF enable/disable
Dial direction to set TV/AV (remove)
Lens ring direction to set Tv/Av (remove)
Switch dials when shooting (remove)
Customize buttons
Customize dials
Clear customized settings
Drive
Drive Mode
Interval timer
Raw Burst Mode (allow allocation to a button)
Bulb timer
Release shutter without lens
Stabiliser
Image stabiliser mode
Connectivity
WiFi Bluetooth connection
Airplane mode
WiFi settings
Bluetooth settings
Nickname
GPS device settings
Reset communication settings
Choose uSB connection App
Power
Power saving
Battery info.
Storage
Record func+ card/folder sel. (this item needs to be
expressed more clearly)
File numbering
File name
Format card
Auto rotate
Setup
Date/Time zone
Language
Beep
Volume
Headphones
Shutter at shutdown
Sensor cleaning
Custom shooting mode
Reset camera
Manage password
Default erase option
Retract lens at power off
Clear all custom functions
General
Print order
Photobook setup
Review
Protect images
Erase images
Rotate stills
Change Mov Rotate info
Rating
Image copy
Raw image processing
Creative assist
Quick control raw processing
Cloud raw processing
Playback creative filters
Resize
Cropping
HEIF to JPG conversion
Slide show
Set image search conditions
View from last seen
Magnification
Image jump
Playback info disp
Highlight alert
AF point disp
Playback grid
HDMI HDR output
Movie (red
button)
Movie rec size
Sound recording
Movie ISO speed settings
Movie auto slow shutter
Movie auto level
Shutter button func for movie
Movie servo AF
Movie play count
Video system PAL/NTSC
Add movie rotate info
Framing
Still image aspect ratio
Flash
External speedlite control
That’s the list, to which I would add Autofocus Lock, which
Canon cameras lack but which I find very useful on the Pana-Lumix cameras which
do have this capability.
Summary
In this post I present a photography-centric approach to
camera menus, using the Canon EOS R7 as an example.
I think many photographers would welcome a camera menu
system like this.

wonderful blog ,
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Great insights on how menu design directly affects real-world shooting efficiency. Clear, logically structured camera menus truly reduce cognitive load and help photographers focus on composition instead of navigation. Ergonomics is often underrated, but it plays a major role in workflow speed and consistency.
ReplyDeleteAt BeatColor https://beatcolor.com/, we also see how streamlined processes—whether in-camera or in post-production—can significantly improve final visual quality. Thanks for sharing this thoughtful analysis.
This article about choosing a “photographically meaningful” camera is really thoughtful, especially because it shows that the right gear isn’t just about specs — it’s about how the camera supports your creative goals and feels while you’re shooting. A camera that feels comfortable in your hands and has intuitive controls can make learning photography much more enjoyable, especially for beginners who might feel overwhelmed by complex menus or heavy equipment. Understanding what features matter most for your style helps you grow your skills faster. If you’re also wondering which models are great for new photographers, this guide on Best Camera Beginner Photographer gives clear advice on beginner-friendly cameras and explains key features to look for. It’s a great resource for anyone starting their photography journey and wanting confidence when picking their first camera.
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