Settings guides · macro photography · Canon EOS M50 Mark II
Best Canon EOS M50 Mark II settings for macro photography
Up close, depth of field shrinks to millimeters, so macro is a fight to get enough of the subject sharp. That means a smaller aperture than you'd expect, careful focus, and often a burst of light. Here it's tuned to the Canon EOS M50 Mark II.
Recommended Canon EOS M50 Mark II settings for macro photography
Tuned for your Canon EOS M50 Mark II
- Reach: its 1.6× APS-C crop turns a 300mm lens into about 480mm of reach — a real advantage for macro photography, though it narrows your wide end.
- Clean ISO: modern APS-C bodies like the Canon EOS M50 Mark II stay usable up to about ISO 6400 — cap Auto ISO there so your shutter stays fast without over-cooking noise.
- Autofocus: use Servo AF with a zone or tracking area, and drop to a single point when it keeps grabbing the background.
Set up your Canon EOS M50 Mark II for macro photography
- Back-button focus: in Custom Controls, assign AF to the AF-ON (or ✱) button and remove AF from the shutter — so focus and shutter fire separately.
- For action: set AF operation to Servo AF with a wide AF area (or Whole-area + tracking).
- Eyes & animals: turn on Subject detection (People / Animals) in the AF menu.
- Burst: set the drive mode to High-speed continuous (H+).
Exact menu wording can vary by firmware.
Why these settings
Magnification collapses depth of field, so you stop down hard just to get an eye or a petal edge sharp — and that small aperture, plus the need to freeze tiny movements, usually means adding light. Focus is set by moving the camera, not the ring.
Common mistakes
- Shooting wide-open and getting only one whisker in focus.
- Using a slow shutter on a breezy flower — it never stops moving.
FAQ
What aperture for macro?
f/8–f/16. Depth of field is so shallow at macro distances that you need a small aperture just to get a usable slice sharp — beyond f/16 diffraction softens things.
Do I need flash for macro?
Often yes. The small apertures macro needs eat a lot of light, and flash also freezes the tiny vibrations that ruin close-up sharpness.
Does the Canon EOS M50 Mark II have good autofocus for macro photography?
The Canon EOS M50 Mark II can handle macro photography well if you use Servo AF (continuous AF) with a tracking or zone area and keep your shutter speed high.
Is the Canon EOS M50 Mark II good for macro photography?
Yes. With the settings above and its APS-C sensor (1.6× crop for extra reach), the Canon EOS M50 Mark II is well suited to macro photography. Dial the settings in for your exact lens with the coach.