
Owner’s Manual
BL00004957-202
EN

ii
Introduction
Thank you for your purchase of this product. Be sure that
you have read this manual and understood its contents be-
fore using the camera. Keep the manual where it will be
read by all who use the product.
For the Latest Information
The latest versions of the manuals are available from:
http://fujifilm-dsc.com/en/manual/
The site can be accessed not only from your
computer but also from smartphones and tab-
lets.
For information on rmware updates, visit:
http://www.fujifilm.com/support/digital_cameras/software/

iii
Menu List
iv
1 Before You Begin
1
2 First Steps
23
3 Basic Photography and Playback
39
4 Movie Recording and Playback
45
5 Taking Photographs
51
6 The Shooting Menus
101
7 Playback and the Playback Menu
127
8 The Setup Menus
145
9 Shortcuts
161
10 Peripherals and Optional Accessories
169
11 Connections
173
12 Technical Notes
185
P
Chapter Index

iv
Menu List
Menu List
Camera menu options are listed below.
Shooting Menus
Adjust settings when shooting photos or movies.
N
See page 101 for details.
SHOOTING MENU
P
A
A
A SCENE POSITION 102
d ADVANCED FILTER
102
F AF/MF SETTING 102
R RELEASE TYPE 106
N ISO 106
O IMAGE SIZE 108
T IMAGE QUALITY 109
U DYNAMIC RANGE 110
B
B
P FILM SIMULATION 111
X FILM SIMULATION BKT 112
B SELF-TIMER 112
o INTERVAL TIMER SHOOTING
113
P TIME-LAPSE MOVIE MODE 114
D WHITE BALANCE 115
f COLOR 115
C
C
q SHARPNESS
115
r HIGHLIGHT TONE
115
s SHADOW TONE
116
h NOISE REDUCTION
116
K LONG EXPOSURE NR
116
S AE BKT SETTING 117
w CONTROL RING SETTING
118
SHOOTING MENU
P
D
D
K TOUCH SCREEN MODE
118
M TOUCH ZOOM
118
c MF ASSIST
118
C PHOTOMETRY 119
v INTERLOCK SPOT AE &
FOCUS AREA
119
p FLASH SET-UP
120
W MOVIE SET-UP 121
E
E
W DIGITAL IMAGE STABILIZER 124
r WIRELESS COMMUNICATION 124
x SHUTTER TYPE
125
J DIGITAL TELE-CONV.
125

v
Menu List
Menu List
Playback Menus
Adjust playback settings.
N
See page 133 for details.
PLAYBACK MENU
P
K
K
U IMAGE TRANSFER ORDER 133
r WIRELESS COMMUNICATION 134
j RAW CONVERSION 134
A ERASE 136
G CROP 138
O RESIZE 138
D PROTECT 139
PLAYBACK MENU
P
L
L
C IMAGE ROTATE 139
B RED EYE REMOVAL 140
I SLIDE SHOW 140
m PHOTOBOOK ASSIST 141
s PC AUTO SAVE 142
K PRINT ORDER (DPOF) 143
V instax PRINTER PRINT 144
M
M
J DISP ASPECT 144
Setup Menus
Adjust basic camera settings.
N
See page 145 for details.
SET-UP
P
G
G
F DATE/TIME 146
N TIME DIFFERENCE 146
Q a
146
R RESET 147
o SOUND & FLASH 147
b SOUND SET-UP 148
A SCREEN SET-UP 149
SET-UP
P
H
H
h BUTTON SETTING
152
I FOCUS RING
152
K TOUCH SCREEN SETTING
153
Z POWER MANAGEMENT
153
t SAVE DATA SET-UP
154
J COLOR SPACE
155
r CONNECTION SETTING 156
I
I
K FORMAT 159

vi
1
Introduction
P
Table of Contents
Introduction ........................................................................................................... ii
For the Latest Information ............................................................................................ ii
Menu List................................................................................................................ iv
Shooting Menus ................................................................................................................iv
Playback Menus ..................................................................................................................v
Setup Menus .........................................................................................................................v
Supplied Accessories .......................................................................................xiv
About This Manual .............................................................................................xv
Symbols and Conventions .........................................................................................xv
Terminology ........................................................................................................................xv
1
Before You Begin 1
Before You Begin 1
Parts of the Camera ............................................................................................. 2
The Mode Dial ......................................................................................................................4
The Serial Number Plate ................................................................................................4
The Focus Stick (Focus Lever) .....................................................................................5
The Command Dials ........................................................................................................5
The DRIVE Button ...............................................................................................................6
The Fn (Function) Buttons ............................................................................................7
The Indicator Lamp ..........................................................................................................8
The Control Ring ................................................................................................................9
Camera Displays .................................................................................................10
The LCD Monitor .............................................................................................................10
Adjusting Display Brightness ................................................................................... 12
The DISP/BACK Button ................................................................................................12
Customizing the Standard Display ......................................................................13
Using the Menus ................................................................................................15
Touch Screen Mode ...........................................................................................16
Shooting Touch Controls ...........................................................................................16
Playback Touch Controls ............................................................................................21
2
First Steps 23
First Steps 23
Attaching the Hand Strap ...............................................................................24

vii
1
Introduction
Table of Contents
Removing the Lens Cap ...................................................................................25
Inserting the Battery and a Memory Card ................................................26
Compatible Memory Cards ...................................................................................... 29
Charging the Battery ........................................................................................30
Turning the Camera On and O ...................................................................33
Checking the Battery Level.............................................................................34
Basic Setup ...........................................................................................................35
Choosing a Di erent Language.............................................................................37
Changing the Time and Date ..................................................................................37
3
Basic Photography and Playback 39
Basic Photography and Playback 39
Taking Photographs ..........................................................................................40
Viewing Pictures .................................................................................................42
Deleting Pictures ................................................................................................43
4
Movie Recording and Playback 45
Movie Recording and Playback 45
Recording Movies ..............................................................................................46
Adjusting Movie Settings ...........................................................................................47
Viewing Movies ...................................................................................................48
5
Taking Photographs 51
Taking Photographs 51
Choosing a Shooting Mode ...........................................................................52
S ADVANCED SR AUTO .......................................................................................... 52
Program AE (P) ..................................................................................................................53
Shutter-Priority AE (S) ................................................................................................... 54
Aperture-Priority AE (A) ...............................................................................................56
Manual Exposure (M) .................................................................................................... 57
u PANORAMA ................................................................................................................59
SP SCENE POSITION /h/M/N/O ..................................................................62
Adv. ADVANCED FILTER ...............................................................................................65
Exposure Compensation .................................................................................67
The Digital Teleconverter ................................................................................68
Continuous Shooting (Burst Mode) ............................................................69
I CONTINUOUS ............................................................................................................ 70
e 4K .......................................................................................................................................71

viii
1
Introduction
Bracketing .............................................................................................................74
O AE BKT ............................................................................................................................75
W ISO BKT ..........................................................................................................................75
X FILM SIMULATION BKT ........................................................................................75
V WHITE BALANCE BKT ............................................................................................75
Y DYNAMIC RANGE BKT ..........................................................................................76
h HDR ..................................................................................................................................76
Autofocus ..............................................................................................................77
Focus Mode ........................................................................................................................78
Autofocus Options (AF Mode) ................................................................................80
Focus-Point Selection...................................................................................................82
Focus/Exposure Lock ........................................................................................86
AE/AF LOCK ........................................................................................................................87
Manual Focus.......................................................................................................88
Checking Focus ................................................................................................................89
Using the Flash ....................................................................................................91
White Balance ......................................................................................................92
WHITE BALANCE ..............................................................................................................93
Custom White Balance ................................................................................................94
k: Color Temperature ...............................................................................................95
Using the Self Timer ..........................................................................................96
2 SEC/10 SEC ......................................................................................................................97
FACE AUTO SHUTTER ....................................................................................................97
SMILE ......................................................................................................................................98
BUDDY ...................................................................................................................................98
GROUP ...................................................................................................................................99
6
The Shooting Menus 101
The Shooting Menus 101
SHOOTING MENU (A/B/C/D/E) ..................................102
A SCENE POSITION .................................................................................................. 102
d ADVANCED FILTER .............................................................................................. 102
F AF/MF SETTING .................................................................................................... 102
FOCUS AREA ........................................................................................................... 102
FOCUS MODE ........................................................................................................102
AF MODE ..................................................................................................................102

ix
1
Introduction
Table of Contents
SNAPSHOT ............................................................................................................... 103
RELEASE/FOCUS PRIORITY ............................................................................. 103
AF+MF ........................................................................................................................ 103
FACE/EYE DETECTION SETTING .................................................................. 104
PRE-AF ........................................................................................................................ 105
AF ILLUMINATOR .................................................................................................. 105
R RELEASE TYPE ......................................................................................................... 106
N ISO ................................................................................................................................. 106
O IMAGE SIZE .............................................................................................................. 108
T IMAGE QUALITY .................................................................................................... 109
U DYNAMIC RANGE ................................................................................................ 110
P FILM SIMULATION ............................................................................................... 111
X FILM SIMULATION BKT ..................................................................................... 112
B SELF-TIMER .............................................................................................................. 112
o INTERVAL TIMER SHOOTING ......................................................................... 113
P TIME-LAPSE MOVIE MODE ............................................................................. 114
D WHITE BALANCE ................................................................................................... 115
f COLOR ........................................................................................................................ 115
q SHARPNESS ............................................................................................................. 115
r HIGHLIGHT TONE ................................................................................................. 115
s SHADOW TONE ..................................................................................................... 116
h NOISE REDUCTION ............................................................................................. 116
K LONG EXPOSURE NR ......................................................................................... 116
S AE BKT SETTING....................................................................................................117
FRAMES/STEP SETTING .................................................................................... 117
1 FRAME/CONTINUOUS .................................................................................. 117
SEQUENCE SETTING .......................................................................................... 117
w CONTROL RING SETTING ................................................................................ 118
K TOUCH SCREEN MODE.....................................................................................118
M TOUCH ZOOM ....................................................................................................... 118
c MF ASSIST ................................................................................................................. 118
C PHOTOMETRY ........................................................................................................ 119
v INTERLOCK SPOT AE & FOCUS AREA ....................................................... 119

x
1
Introduction
p FLASH SET-UP ........................................................................................................ 120
FLASH MODE ......................................................................................................... 120
FLASH COMPENSATION ..................................................................................120
RED EYE REMOVAL .............................................................................................. 120
W MOVIE SET-UP ........................................................................................................ 121
MOVIE MODE ......................................................................................................... 121
HD HIGH SPEED VIDEO ....................................................................................121
MOVIE ISO ................................................................................................................ 122
FOCUS MODE ........................................................................................................122
AF MODE ..................................................................................................................122
HDMI OUTPUT INFO DISPLAY ...................................................................... 122
4K MOVIE OUTPUT .............................................................................................. 123
HDMI REC CONTROL ......................................................................................... 123
MIC LEVEL ADJUSTMENT ................................................................................ 123
MIC/REMOTE RELEASE .....................................................................................123
W DIGITAL IMAGE STABILIZER ............................................................................124
r WIRELESS COMMUNICATION ....................................................................... 124
x SHUTTER TYPE ....................................................................................................... 125
J DIGITAL TELE-CONV............................................................................................ 125
7
Playback and the Playback Menu 127
Playback and the Playback Menu 127
The Playback Display ..................................................................................... 128
The DISP/BACK Button .............................................................................................129
Viewing Pictures .............................................................................................. 131
Playback Zoom .............................................................................................................. 132
Multi-Frame Playback ................................................................................................ 132
The Playback Menu (K/L/M) .....................................................133
U IMAGE TRANSFER ORDER ............................................................................... 133
r WIRELESS COMMUNICATION ....................................................................... 134
j RAW CONVERSION .............................................................................................. 134
A ERASE .......................................................................................................................... 136
G CROP ........................................................................................................................... 138
O RESIZE .........................................................................................................................138

xi
1
Introduction
Table of Contents
D PROTECT ................................................................................................................... 139
C IMAGE ROTATE ....................................................................................................... 139
B RED EYE REMOVAL ..............................................................................................140
I SLIDE SHOW ........................................................................................................... 140
m PHOTOBOOK ASSIST .......................................................................................... 141
s PC AUTO SAVE .......................................................................................................142
K PRINT ORDER (DPOF) ........................................................................................ 143
V instax PRINTER PRINT ........................................................................................ 144
J DISP ASPECT ........................................................................................................... 144
8
The Setup Menus 145
The Setup Menus 145
The Setup Menu (G/H/I) ........................................................... 146
F DATE/TIME ............................................................................................................... 146
N TIME DIFFERENCE ................................................................................................146
Q a .............................................................................................................146
R RESET ...........................................................................................................................147
o SOUND & FLASH .................................................................................................. 147
b SOUND SET-UP ..................................................................................................... 148
OPERATION VOL. .................................................................................................. 148
SHUTTER VOLUME .............................................................................................. 148
SHUTTER SOUND ................................................................................................ 148
PLAYBACK VOLUME ............................................................................................ 148
A SCREEN SET-UP ..................................................................................................... 149
IMAGE DISP. ............................................................................................................. 149
PREVIEW EXP. IN MANUAL MODE .............................................................. 149
LCD BRIGHTNESS ................................................................................................. 149
LCD COLOR.............................................................................................................. 149
PREVIEW PIC. EFFECT ........................................................................................ 150
FRAMING GUIDELINE ........................................................................................150
AUTOROTATE PB ...................................................................................................151
FOCUS CHECK .......................................................................................................151
FOCUS SCALE UNITS ......................................................................................... 151
DISP. CUSTOM SETTING ...................................................................................151

xii
1
Introduction
h BUTTON SETTING ................................................................................................ 152
FUNCTION (Fn) SETTING ................................................................................. 152
EDIT/SAVE QUICK MENU ................................................................................. 152
FOCUS LEVER SETTING ....................................................................................152
I FOCUS RING ............................................................................................................ 152
K TOUCH SCREEN SETTING ................................................................................153
Z POWER MANAGEMENT.................................................................................... 153
AUTO POWER OFF ..............................................................................................153
HIGH PERFORMANCE ........................................................................................ 153
t SAVE DATA SET-UP .............................................................................................. 154
FRAME NO. ............................................................................................................... 154
SAVE ORG IMAGE ................................................................................................. 154
EDIT FILE NAME .................................................................................................... 155
DATE STAMP............................................................................................................ 155
J COLOR SPACE ......................................................................................................... 155
r CONNECTION SETTING .................................................................................... 156
Bluetooth SETTINGS ..........................................................................................156
PC AUTO SAVE ....................................................................................................... 157
instax PRINTER CONNECTION SETTING .................................................157
GENERAL SETTINGS ........................................................................................... 158
INFORMATION ....................................................................................................... 158
RESET WIRELESS SETTING ...............................................................................158
K FORMAT ..................................................................................................................... 159
9
Shortcuts 161
Shortcuts 161
Shortcut Options ............................................................................................. 162
The Q (Quick Menu) Button .........................................................................163
The Quick Menu Display ......................................................................................... 163
Viewing and Changing Settings ......................................................................... 164
Editing the Quick Menu ...........................................................................................165
The Fn (Function) Buttons ...........................................................................166
Assigning a Role to the Function Buttons .................................................... 167
10
Peripherals and Optional Accessories 169
Peripherals and Optional Accessories 169
Accessories from Fuji lm.............................................................................. 170

xiii
1
Introduction
Table of Contents
11
Connections 173
Connections 173
HDMI Output ....................................................................................................174
Connecting to HDMI Devices .............................................................................. 174
Shooting ............................................................................................................................ 175
Playback .............................................................................................................................175
Wireless Connections (Bluetooth, Wireless LAN/Wi-Fi) .....................176
Smart Phones and Tablets: FUJIFILM Camera Remote ......................... 176
Computers: FUJIFILM PC AutoSave .................................................................. 178
Computers: Wireless Connections .................................................................... 178
Connecting to Computers via USB ........................................................... 179
Windows (MyFinePix Studio) ................................................................................ 179
Mac OS X/macOS ......................................................................................................... 179
RAW FILE CONVERTER EX ........................................................................................ 179
Connecting the Camera .......................................................................................... 180
instax SHARE Printers .................................................................................... 182
Establishing a Connection ..................................................................................... 182
Printing Pictures ............................................................................................................ 183
12
Technical Notes 185
Technical Notes 185
Software from Fuji lm ...................................................................................186
FUJIFILM Camera Remote ......................................................................................186
FUJIFILM PC AutoSave .............................................................................................. 186
MyFinePix Studio .......................................................................................................... 186
RAW FILE CONVERTER EX ........................................................................................ 186
For Your Safety ................................................................................................. 187
Product Care ..................................................................................................... 196
Firmware Updates ...........................................................................................197
Checking the Firmware Version .......................................................................... 197
Troubleshooting .............................................................................................. 198
Warning Messages and Displays ...............................................................204
Memory Card Capacity ................................................................................. 207
Speci cations ...................................................................................................208

xiv
1
Introduction
Supplied Accessories
The following are included with the camera:
•
NP-95 rechargeable battery
•
AC-5VG AC power adapter
•
Plug adapter (Shape of adapter varies with region of sale.)
•
USB cable
•
Hand strap
•
Lens cap
•
Owner’s Manual (this manual)

xv
1
Introduction
About This Manual
This manual contains instructions for your FUJIFILMXF10
digital camera. Be sure you have read and understood its
contents before proceeding.
Symbols and Conventions
The following symbols are used in this manual:
O
Information that should be read to prevent damage to the
product.
N
Additional information that may be helpful when using the
product.
P
Pages on which related information may be found.
Menus and other text in the displays are shown in bold. Illustrations
are for explanatory purposes only; drawings may be simpli ed,
while photographs are not necessarily taken with the model of
camera described in this manual.
Terminology
The optional SD, SDHC, and SDXC memory cards the camera uses
to store pictures are referred to as “memory cards”. The LCD mon-
itor may be referred to as the “LCD”.

xvi
MEMO

1
Before You Begin

2
1
Before You Begin
Parts of the Camera
A
Rear command dial ..........................................5
B
Shutter button ................................................. 41
C
ON/OFF button ................................................. 33
D
Mode dial ...............................................4, 40, 52
E
Fn1 (function 1) button ......................... 7, 166
F
Microphone ...........................................123, 171
G
Flash ..........................................................91, 120
H
Control ring...................................9, 68, 88, 118
I
Lens ...................................................................196
J
AF-assist illuminator.............................40, 105
Self-timer lamp ......................................96, 112
K
Front command dial ............................... 5, 131
L
Battery chamber .............................................26
M
Memory card slot ............................................ 26
N
Battery latch ..................................................... 28
O
Lens cap ............................................................. 25

3
1
Before You Begin
Parts of the Camera
P
DRIVE button ..................................6, 46, 69, 74
b (delete) button (playback mode) ......... 43
Q
a (playback) button ...................................42
R
Indicator lamp ....................................................8
S
Q (quick menu) button ................................163
RAW conversion button
(playback mode) ........................................134
T
Fn2 (function 2) button ......................... 7, 166
U
Eyelet for hand strap ...................................... 24
V
Connector cover ......................... 171, 174, 180
W
Focus stick (focus lever) .............................5, 82
X
MENU/OK button .............................................15
Y
DISP (display)/BACK button ................12, 129
Z
Cable channel cover for DC coupler
a
Battery-chamber cover ................................. 26
b
Battery-chamber cover latch ...................... 26
c
Serial number plate...........................................4
d
Tripod mount
e
Speaker .....................................................48, 148
f
LCD monitor ..................................................... 10
Touch screen ..................................16, 118, 153
g
Microphone/remote release connector
(⌀2.5mm) ....................................................171
h
HDMI Micro connector (Type D) ..............174
i
Micro USB (Micro-B) USB 2.0 connector
................................................................171, 180

4
1
Before You Begin
The Mode Dial
To select a shooting mode, rotate the dial until
the icon for the desired mode aligns with the
index.
Mode
Mode
Description
Description
P
P
A
A
S
S
(ADVANCED SR AUTO)
(ADVANCED SR AUTO) The camera automatically optimizes settings
to the scene.
52
B
B
P
P
(PROGRAM AE)
(PROGRAM AE) Aperture and shutter speed can be adjusted
using program shift.
53
C
C
S
S
(SHUTTER PRIORITY AE)
(SHUTTER PRIORITY AE)
A
A
(APERTURE PRIORITY AE)
(APERTURE PRIORITY AE)
M
M
(MANUAL)
(MANUAL)
Select for full control over camera settings,
including aperture (M and A) and/or shutter
speed (M and S).
54
56
57
D
D
u
u
(PANORAMA)
(PANORAMA) Follow an on-screen guide to create a pan-
orama.
59
E
E
SP
SP
(SCENE POSITION)
(SCENE POSITION)
h
h
/
/
M
M
/
/
N
N
/
/
O
O
Choose a scene suited to the subject or shoot-
ing conditions and let the camera do the rest.
62
F
F
Adv.
Adv.
(ADVANCED FILTER)
(ADVANCED FILTER) Take photos with fi lter eff ects.
65
The Serial Number Plate
Do not remove the serial number plate, which provides the
FCCID, KC mark, serial number, and other important information.

5
1
Before You Begin
Parts of the Camera
The Focus Stick (Focus Lever)
Tilt or press the focus stick to select the focus
area. The focus stick can also be used to navi-
gate the menus.
The Command Dials
The rear and front command dials are used for the operations
below.
Rear Command Dial
Rotate
Rotate
•
Exposure compensation
•
Choose a shutter speed
•
Adjust settings in the quick menu
•
Zoom in or out in full frame playback
•
Zoom in or out in multi-frame playback
Front Command Dial
Rotate
Rotate
•
Program shift
•
Choose a shutter speed
•
Adjust aperture
•
Adjust settings in the quick menu
•
View other pictures during playback

6
1
Before You Begin
The DRIVE Button
Pressing the DRIVE button displays drive
mode options, where you can choose
from the following the drive modes.
Mode
Mode
P
P
B
B
STILL IMAGE
STILL IMAGE
40
I
I
CONTINUOUS
CONTINUOUS 70
e
e
4K
4K 71
O
O
AE BKT
AE BKT
75
W
W
ISO BKT
ISO BKT
75
X
X
FILM SIMULATION BKT
FILM SIMULATION BKT
75
V
V
WHITE BALANCE BKT
WHITE BALANCE BKT
75
Y
Y
DYNAMIC RANGE BKT
DYNAMIC RANGE BKT 76
h
h
HDR
HDR 76
F
F
MOVIE
MOVIE 46

7
1
Before You Begin
Parts of the Camera
The Fn (Function) Buttons
Assign a role to the function buttons for quick access to the se-
lected feature.
Fn1 (function 1) button
Fn1 (function 1) button
Fn2 (function 2) button
Fn2 (function 2) button
N
The role performed by the function buttons can be chosen using
h BUTTON SETTING> FUNCTION (Fn) SETTING (
P
152, 167).

8
1
Before You Begin
The Indicator Lamp
The indicator lamp shows camera status
as follows:
Indicator lamp
Indicator lamp
Camera status
Camera status
Glows green Focus locked.
Blinks green Focus or slow shutter speed warning. Pictures can be taken.
Blinks green and
orange
•
Camera on: Recording pictures. Additional pictures can be
taken.
•
Camera o : Uploading pictures to a smartphone or tablet.
Glows orange
Recording pictures. No additional pictures can be taken at
this time.
Blinks orange Flash charging; fl ash will not fi re when picture is taken.
Blinks red Lens or memory error.
N
Warnings may also appear in the display.

9
1
Before You Begin
Parts of the Camera
The Control Ring
Use the control ring for quick access to
camera functions during shooting.
The control ring is assigned the DEFAULT
role at shipment.
DEFAULT
When DEFAULT is selected, the function assigned to the control
ring changes with the shooting mode.
Shooting mode
Shooting mode
Icon
Icon
Function
Function
Autofocus
Autofocus
Manual focus
Manual focus
ADVANCED SR AUTO
ADVANCED SR AUTO
S
Digital teleconverter
—
ADVANCED FILTER
ADVANCED FILTER Adv. Filter selection
SCENE
SCENE
POSITION
POSITION
PORTRAIT
PORTRAIT
SP
Scene selection
MULTIPLE EXPOSURE
MULTIPLE EXPOSURE Film simulation
MF
Other
Other Scene selection
PORTRAIT ENHANCER
PORTRAIT ENHANCER
h
Portrait enhancer level
selection
—
LANDSCAPE
M
Digital teleconverter
MF
SPORT
SPORT
N
NIGHT
NIGHT
O
PANORAMA
PANORAMA
u
Film simulation
PROGRAM AE
PROGRAM AE P
Digital teleconverter
SHUTTER PRIORITY AE
SHUTTER PRIORITY AE S
APERTURE PRIORITY AE
APERTURE PRIORITY AE A
MANUAL
MANUAL M
N
The function assigned to the control ring can be changed using
the w CONTROL RING SETTING option in the shooting menu
(
P
118). The role assignment can also be changed using function
buttons (
P
166).
The control ring functions di erently during movie recording.

10
1
Before You Begin
Camera Displays
This section lists the indicators that may be displayed
during shooting.
O
For illustrative purposes, displays are shown with all indicators lit.
The LCD Monitor
1000
5.6 1.0 12800
5
4
3
2
1
0
-1
-2
-3
-4
-5
ᵫᵤ
ᵏᵗᵗ
ᵎᵏᵍᵎᵏᵍᵐᵎᵏᵖᴾᵏᵎᵘᵎᵎᴾᵟᵫ

11
1
Before You Begin
Camera Displays
A
Date stamp .....................................................155
B
Focus check .............................................89, 151
C
Depth-of-fi eld preview ..................................56
D
Location data download status ...............158
E
Bluetooth ON/OFF ........................................156
F
Image transfer status...................................133
G
Number of frames selected for upload
.........................................................................133
H
Movie mode ............................................46, 121
I
Time remaining ...............................................46
J
Date and time .........................................35, 146
K
Number of available frames
1
.................... 207
L
Image size .......................................................108
M
Image quality .................................................109
N
Touch screen mode
2
...................................... 16
O
Focus frame ............................................... 82, 86
P
Temperature warning .................................206
Q
Focus warning ................................................. 41
R
White balance ........................................92, 115
S
Dynamic range .............................................110
T
Film simulation
2
....................................19, 111
U
Scene position
2
......................................... 19, 62
V
Advanced fi lter
2
........................................ 19, 65
W
Portrait enhancement level
2
....................... 19
X
Sound and fl ash indicator .........................147
Y
Histogram ......................................................... 14
Z
Focus mode
2
............................................. 19, 78
a
Distance indicator .......................................... 89
b
Battery level ...................................................... 34
c
Sensitivity ........................................................ 106
d
Exposure compensation ............................... 67
e
Aperture ................................................53, 56, 57
f
Shutter speed ......................................53, 54, 57
g
AE lock ................................................................86
h
Metering ..........................................................119
i
Shooting mode............................................4, 52
j
Focus mode ...................................................... 78
k
AF lock ................................................................86
l
Focus indicator ................................................ 79
m
Manual focus indicator.................................88
n
AF+MF indicator ...........................................103
o
Shutter type ....................................................125
p
Continuous mode ........................................... 69
q
Self-timer indicator ...............................96, 112
r
Exposure indicator ................................... 57, 67
s
Microphone/remote release .............123, 171
t
Flash mode .......................................................91
u
Flash compensation ....................................120
v
Touch zoom ...................................................... 20
1 Shows “9999” if there is space for over 9999 frames.
2 Camera functions can also be accessed via touch controls.

12
1
Before You Begin
Adjusting Display Brightness
Use the items in the A SCREEN SET-UP menu to adjust the
brightness and hue of the LCD monitor when changes in am-
bient brightness make the display di cult to read. Choose LCD
BRIGHTNESS to adjust brightness or LCD COLOR to adjust hue.
The DISP/BACK Button
Press DISP/BACK to cycle through display
modes as follows.
Standard Information o
1000
5.6 1.0 12800
5
4
3
2
1
0
-1
-2
-3
-4
-5

13
1
Before You Begin
Camera Displays
Customizing the Standard Display
To choose the items shown in the standard display:
1
Display standard indicators.
Use the DISP/BACK button to display standard indicators.
2
Select DISP. CUSTOM SETTING.
Select A SCREEN SET-UP> DISP. CUSTOM SETTING in the
setup menu.
3
Choose items.
Highlight items and press MENU/OK to select or deselect.
Item
Item
Default
Default
FRAMING GUIDELINE
R
ELECTRONIC LEVEL
R
FOCUS FRAME
R
AF DISTANCE INDICATOR
R
MF DISTANCE INDICATOR
R
HISTOGRAM
R
SHOOTING MODE
R
APERTURE/S-SPEED/ISO
R
INFORMATION BACKGROUND
R
Expo. Comp. (Digit)
R
Expo. Comp. (Scale)
R
FOCUS MODE
R
PHOTOMETRY
R
Item
Item
Default
Default
SHUTTER TYPE
R
FLASH
R
CONTINUOUS MODE
R
WHITE BALANCE
R
FILM SIMULATION
R
DYNAMIC RANGE
R
FRAMES REMAINING
R
IMAGE SIZE/QUALITY
R
MOVIE MODE & REC. TIME
R
DIGITAL TELE-CONV.
R
AUTO IMAGE TRANSFER
R
BATTERY LEVEL
R
4
Save changes.
Press DISP/BACK to save changes.
5
Exit the menus.
Press DISP/BACK as needed to exit the menus and return to the
shooting display.

14
1
Before You Begin
Camera Displays
Virtual Horizon
Selecting ELECTRONIC LEVEL displays a virtual
horizon. The camera is level when the two lines
overlap. Note that the virtual horizon may not
be displayed if the camera lens is pointed up or
down.
Histograms
Histograms show the distribution of tones in the image. Brightness is
shown by the horizontal axis, the number of pixels by the vertical axis.
Number of pixels
Shadows Highlights
Pixel brightness
•
Optimal exposure: Pixels are distributed in an
even curve throughout the tone range.
•
Overexposed: Pixels are clustered on the right
side of the graph.
•
Underexposed: Pixels are clustered on the left
side of the graph.

15
1
Before You Begin
Using the Menus
To display the menus, press MENU/OK.
Shooting
Shooting
Playback
Playback
EXIT
SHOOTING MENU
ISO
AF/MF SETTING
PROGRAM AE
IMAGE SIZE
IMAGE QUALITY
DYNAMIC RANGE
P
RELEASE TYPE
WIRELESS COMMUNICATION
PLAYBACK MENU
ERASE
CROP
RESIZE
PROTECT
EXIT
RAW CONVERSION
IMAGE TRANSFER ORDER
To navigate the menus:
1
Press MENU/OK to display the menus.
EXIT
SHOOTING MENU
ISO
AF/MF SETTING
PROGRAM AE
IMAGE SIZE
IMAGE QUALITY
DYNAMIC RANGE
P
RELEASE TYPE
2
Press the focus stick (focus lever) left
to highlight the tab for the current
menu.
P
EXIT
ISO
AF/MF SETTING
PROGRAM AE
IMAGE SIZE
IMAGE QUALITY
DYNAMIC RANGE
RELEASE TYPE
SHOOTING MENU
Tab
3
Press the focus stick up or down to highlight the tab (A,
B, C, D, E, K, L, M, G, H or I) containing
the desired item.
4
Press the focus stick right to place the cursor in the menu.
N
The focus stick (focus lever) does not tilt diagonally.

16
1
Before You Begin
Touch Screen Mode
The camera’s LCD monitor can be used as a touch screen.
Shooting Touch Controls
Touch controls can be used for such op-
erations as choosing the focus area and
taking photographs. The operation per-
formed can be selected by tapping the
touch screen mode indicator in the dis-
play to cycle through the following op-
tions.
ᵫᵤ
N
Touch control settings can be adjusted using the K TOUCH SCREEN
MODE option in the shooting menu.
The touch screen mode indicator is not displayed and touch con-
trols cannot be used when OFF is selected for K TOUCH SCREEN
SETTING in the setup menu.
Still Photography
Mode
Mode
Description
Description
TOUCH
TOUCH
SHOOTING
SHOOTING
Tap your subject in the display to focus and release the shutter.
In burst mode, pictures will be taken while you keep your fi nger
on the display.
AF
AF
Tap to select a focus point and lock focus. The shutter can be re-
leased by pressing the shutter button all the way down.
AREA
AREA
Tap to select a point for focus or zoom. The focus frame will move
to the selected point.
OFF
OFF
Touch focus, touch focus-area selection, and touch shutter dis-
abled.

17
1
Before You Begin
Touch Screen Mode
N
During burst shooting in the e 4K> f 4K BURST drive mode,
the “touch shooting” icon changes to “touch shooting disabled”
and no picture will be taken when you tap the display.
When 5m or 2m is selected for F AF/MF SETTING>
SNAPSHOT, the “touch focus” icon changes to “touch focus dis-
abled” and the camera will not focus when you tap the display.
Touch Controls for Focus Zoom
Di erent touch controls are used during focus zoom (focus check enabled).
•
Central area: Tap the center of the display to
take photographs.
•
Other areas: Tapping other areas simply scrolls
the display; no other operations are per-
formed.

18
1
Before You Begin
Movie Recording
Mode
Mode
Description
Description
TOUCH
TOUCH
SHOOTING
SHOOTING
Tap your subject in the display to focus. In focus mode
CONTINUOUS AF (AF-C), the camera will continually adjust fo-
cus in response to changes in the distance to the subject; to refo-
cus in focus mode SINGLE AF (AF-S) or to focus on a new subject
in focus mode CONTINUOUS AF, tap the subject in the monitor.
AF
AF
AREA
AREA
Tap to select a focus point. If SINGLE AF (AF-S) is selected for
focus mode, the camera will focus on the subject in the selected
focus point when the shutter button is pressed halfway. In focus
mode CONTINUOUS AF (AF-C), the camera will continually ad-
just focus in response to changes in the distance to the subject in
the selected focus point.
OFF
OFF Touch focus disabled.
N
If MULTI is selected for AF MODE when K TOUCH SCREEN MODE is
enabled, W MOVIE SET-UP> AF MODE will automatically change to
AREA.

19
1
Before You Begin
Touch Screen Mode
Adjusting Settings
The touch screen can be used to adjust
settings. The settings available vary with
the shooting mode.
ᵫᵤ
Mode
Mode
Description
Description
FILM SIMULATION
FILM SIMULATION
Choose a fi lm simulation type. Available in S, P, S, A,
and M modes.
SCENE POSITION
SCENE POSITION Choose a scene. Available in SP mode.
ADVANCED FILTER
ADVANCED FILTER Choose an advanced fi lter. Available in Adv. mode.
PORTRAIT ENHANCER
PORTRAIT ENHANCER
Choose the portrait enhancement level. Available in
h PORTRAIT ENHANCER (Z) mode.
Choosing a Focus Mode
The touch screen can be used to choose
the focus mode (
P
78).
ᵫᵤ

20
1
Before You Begin
Touch Function
Functions can be assigned to the follow-
ing ick gestures in much the same way
as function buttons (
P
166):
•
Flick up: T-Fn1
•
Flick left: T-Fn2
•
Flick right: T-Fn3
•
Flick down: T-Fn4
Touch Zoom
Touch controls can be used for digital zoom, regardless of the
mode selected for K TOUCH SCREEN MODE in the shooting
menu.
1
Select ON for M TOUCH ZOOM in the shooting menu.
2
Use pinch-out and pinch-in gestures (
P
21) to zoom in
and out using digital zoom.
N
Regardless of where you place your ngers, the camera will zoom
in on and out from the center of the frame.
The camera will focus on the area selected for F AF/MF
SETTING> FOCUS AREA. If AREA is selected for K TOUCH
SCREEN MODE, you can select the focus area by tapping the
display.
3
Take pictures.

21
1
Before You Begin
Touch Screen Mode
Playback Touch Controls
When ON is selected for K TOUCH SCREEN SETTING in the set-
up menu, touch controls can be used for the following playback
operations:
•
Swipe: Swipe a nger across the display
to view other images.
•
Pinch-out: Place two ngers on the dis-
play and spread them apart to zoom in.
•
Pinch-in: Place two ngers on the display
and slide them together to zoom out.
N
Pictures can be zoomed out until the en-
tire image is visible but no further.
•
Double-tap: Tap the display twice to zoom
in on the focus point.
•
Drag: View other areas of the image
during playback zoom.

22
MEMO

23
First Steps

24
2
First Steps
Attaching the Hand Strap
Attach the hand strap to the eyelet as shown.
O
To avoid dropping the camera, be sure the hand strap is correctly se-
cured.
Securing the Hand Strap
When using the hand strap, adjust the slider as
shown to secure the strap around your wrist.

25
2
First Steps
Removing the Lens Cap
Remove the lens cap as shown.
The Lens Cap
To prevent accidental loss, use the string to at-
tach the lens cap to the hand strap.

26
2
First Steps
Inserting the Battery and a Memory Card
Insert the battery and memory card as described below.
1
Open the battery-chamber cover.
Slide the battery-chamber latch as
shown and open the battery-cham-
ber cover.
O
Do not remove the battery when the
camera is on. Failure to observe this
precaution could damage image les
or memory cards.
Do not use excessive force when han-
dling the battery-chamber cover.
2
Insert the battery.
Insert the battery as shown.
O
Insert the battery in the orientation
shown. Do not use force or attempt
to insert the battery upside down or
backwards. The battery will slide in
easily in the correct orientation.
Con rm that the battery is securely
latched.

27
2
First Steps
Inserting the Battery and a Memory Card
3
Insert the memory card.
Holding the card in the orientation
shown, slide it in until it clicks into
place at the back of the slot.
O
Be sure card is in the correct orienta-
tion; do not insert at an angle or use
force.
Format memory cards before rst use,
and be sure to reformat all memory
cards after using them in a computer
or other device.
4
Close the battery-chamber cover.
Close and latch the cover.
O
If the cover does not close, check that
the battery is in the correct orienta-
tion. Do not attempt to force the cov-
er shut.

28
2
First Steps
Removing the Battery and Memory Card
Before removing the battery or memory card, turn the camera o and open
the battery-chamber cover.
To remove the battery, press the battery latch to
the side, and slide the battery out of the camera
as shown.
O
The battery may become hot when used in hightemperature environ-
ments. Observe caution when removing the battery.
To remove the memory card, press it in and re-
lease it slowly. The card can then be removed
by hand. When a memory card is removed, the
card could be ejected too quickly. Use your n-
ger to hold it and gently release the card.
O
Press the center of the card when ejecting it.

29
2
First Steps
Inserting the Battery and a Memory Card
Compatible Memory Cards
Fuji lm and SanDisk SD, SDHC, and SDXC memory cards have
been approved for use in the camera; UHS-I cards are support-
ed, while cards with a UHS speed class of 3 or better are recom-
mended for 4K burst, multi-focus, and movie modes. A complete
list of approved memory cards is available at http://www.fujifilm.
com/support/digital_cameras/compatibility/. Operation is not
guaranteed with other cards. The camera cannot be used with
xD-Picture Cards or MultiMediaCard (MMC) devices.
O
Do not turn the camera o or remove the memory card while the memory
card is being formatted or data are being recorded to or deleted from the
card. Failure to observe this precaution could damage the card.
Memory cards can be locked, making it im-
possible to format the card or to record or
delete images. Before inserting a memory
card, slide the write-protect switch to the
unlocked position.
Memory cards are small and can be swallowed; keep out of reach of
children. If a child swallows a memory card, seek medical assistance
immediately.
miniSD or microSD adapters that are larger or smaller than memory
cards may not eject normally; if the card does not eject, take the camera
to an authorized service representative. Do not forcibly remove the card.
Do not a x labels or other objects to memory cards. Peeling labels
can cause camera malfunction.
Movie recording may be interrupted with some types of memory card.
When you rst take a picture after formatting a memory card in the
camera, the camera will create a folder in which the new shot and
subsequent. Do not rename or delete this folder or use a computer
or other device to edit, delete, or rename image les. Always use the
camera to delete pictures; before editing or renaming les, copy them
to a computer and edit or rename the copies, not the originals. Re-
naming the les on the camera can cause problems during playback.

30
2
First Steps
Charging the Battery
The battery is not charged at shipment. Turn the camera o
and charge the battery before use. The camera charges the
battery internally.
O
An NP-95 rechargeable battery is supplied with the camera. Charging
takes about 250 minutes.
1
Attach the plug adapter to the AC power adapter.
Attach the plug adapter as shown, mak-
ing sure that it is fully inserted and clicks
into place on the AC power adapter ter-
minals.
O
The supplied plug adapter is for use
exclusively with the AC-5VG AC power
adapter. Do not use it with other devices.
The shape of the plug adapter varies with
the country of sale.
2
Charge the battery.
Connect the camera to the supplied AC power adapter using
the supplied USB cable. Then plug the AC power adapter into
an indoor power outlet.
O
Connect the cable to the camera’s Micro USB (Micro-B) connector.
Be sure the connectors are in the correct orientation and then
insert them fully.

31
2
First Steps
Charging the Battery
Charge Status
The indicator lamp shows battery charge status as follows:
Indicator lamp
Indicator lamp
Battery status
Battery status
On Battery charging.
Off Charging complete.
Blinks Battery fault.
O
The battery will not charge while the camera is on.
The supplied AC power adapter is compatible with power supplies of
100 to 240V (a plug adapter may be needed for overseas use).
Do not a x labels or other objects to the battery. Failure to observe
this precaution could make it impossible to remove the battery from
the camera.
Do not short the battery terminals. The battery could overheat.
Read the cautions in “The Battery and Power Supply”.
Use only battery chargers designated for use with the battery. Failure
to observe this precaution could result in product malfunction.
Do not remove the labels from the battery or attempt to split or peel
the outer casing.
The battery gradually loses its charge when not in use. Charge the
battery one or two days before use. If the battery fails to hold a charge,
it has reached the end of its charging life and must be replaced.
Unplug the AC power adapter from the power outlet when it is not
in use.
Remove dirt from the battery terminals with a clean, dry cloth. Failure
to observe this precaution could prevent the battery from charging.
Charging times may increase at very low or very high temperatures.

32
2
First Steps
Charging the Battery
Charging via Computer
The battery can be charged by connecting the camera to a computer. Con-
nect the supplied USB cable as shown, making sure the connectors are fully
inserted.
•
The battery will not charge while the camera is on.
•
Connect the cable to the camera’s Micro USB (Micro-B) connector.
•
Connect the camera directly to the computer; do not use a USB hub or
keyboard.
•
Charging stops if the computer enters sleep mode; to resume charging,
activate the computer and disconnect and reconnect the USB cable.
•
Charging may not be supported depending on the model of computer,
computer settings, and the computer’s current state.

33
2
First Steps
Turning the Camera On and O
Use the ON/OFF button to turn the camera on and o .
Press the ON/OFF button once to turn the
camera on and again to turn it o .
O
Fingerprints and other marks on the lens can a ect pictures and the
view through the lens in the camera display. Keep the lens clean.
N
Press the a button to start playback. Press the shutter button halfway
to return to shooting mode.
The camera will turn o automatically if no operations are performed
for the length of time selected for Z POWER MANAGEMENT>
AUTO POWER OFF.
Selecting HIGH PERFORMANCE for Z POWER MANAGEMENT re-
duces startup time.

34
2
First Steps
Checking the Battery Level
After turning the camera on, check the battery level in the
display.
Battery level is shown as follows:
P
Indicator
Indicator
Description
Description
O
(white)
Battery partially discharged.
M
(white)
Battery about two-thirds charged.
K
(white)
Battery about one-third charged. Charge as soon as possible.
J
(red)
Low battery. Charge battery.
A
(blinks red)
Battery exhausted. Turn camera off and recharge battery.

35
2
First Steps
Basic Setup
When you turn the camera on for the rst time, you can
choose a language and set the camera clock. At default
settings, you can also pair the camera with a smartphone
or tablet so that you can later synchronize the clocks or
download pictures. Follow the steps below when turning
the camera on for the rst time.
N
If you intend to pair the camera with a smartphone or tablet, install
and launch the latest version of the FUJIFILM Camera Remote App on
the smart device before proceeding. For more information, visit:
http://app.fujifilm-dsc.com/en/camera_remote/
1
Turn the camera on.
A language-selection dialog will be
displayed.
2
Choose a language.
Highlight a language using the fo-
cus stick (focus lever,
A
) and press
MENU/OK (
B
).
B
A
3
Pair the camera with the smartphone or tablet.
Press MENU/OK to pair the camera with
a smartphone or tablet running the
FUJIFILM Camera Remote app.
N
To skip pairing, press DISP/BACK.
SET
HELP
SKIP
PAIRING REGISTRATION
67$570(18
PAIR WITH SMARTPHONE?
IMAGES CAN BE EASILY TRANSFERRED
TO SMARTPHONE BY PAIRING
SCAN QR CODE OR SEARCH FOR "FUJIFILM
Camera Remote" APP ON THE WEB

36
2
First Steps
4
Check the time.
When pairing is complete, you will
be prompted to set the camera clock
to the time reported by the smart-
phone or tablet. Check that the time
is correct.
N
To set the clock manually, press
DISP/BACK (
P
37).
SET CANCEL
Phone000111111
PAIRING COMPLETE
1/1/2018 12:00 PM
SET DATE/TIME FROM SMARTPHONE?
PAIRING REGISTRATION
5
Synchronize the camera settings with
the settings confi gured on your smart-
phone or tablet.
N
The option selected can be changed
at any time using r CONNECTION
SETTING> Bluetooth SETTINGS.
SMARTPHONE SYNC. SETTING
SET
TIME
OFF
LOCATION
LOCATION&TIME
6
Set the clock.
Press MENU/OK to set the camera clock to the time reported by
the smartphone or tablet and exit to shooting mode.
N
If the battery is removed for an extended period, the camera clock will
be reset and the language-selection dialog will be displayed when the
camera is turned on.
Skipping the Current Step
Press DISP/BACK to skip the current step. A con rmation dialog will be dis-
played; select NO to avoid repeating any steps you skipped the next time
the camera is turned on.

37
2
First Steps
Basic Setup
Choosing a Di erent Language
To change the language:
1
Display language options.
Display the setup menu and select Q a.
2
Choose a language.
Highlight the desired option and press MENU/OK.
Changing the Time and Date
To set the camera clock:
1
Display DATE/TIME options.
Display the setup menu and select F DATE/TIME.
2
Set the clock.
Press the focus stick (focus lever) left or right to highlight the
year, month, day, hour, or minute and press up or down to
change. Press MENU/OK to set the clock.

38
MEMO

39
Basic Photography and
Playback

40
3
Basic Photography and Playback
Taking Photographs
This section explains basic photography.
1
Select S mode.
Rotate the mode dial to S
(ADVANCED SR AUTO). The follow-
ing information will be displayed in
the LCD monitor.
A
Scene: The camera automatically
selects the appropriate scene.
B
The u Icon: Shows that the cam-
era is focusing on the subjects’
eyes.
PORTRAIT
O
In S mode, the camera continuously adjusts focus and search-
es for eyes, increasing the drain on the battery; in addition, the
sound of the camera focusing may be audible.
2
Ready the camera.
Hold the camera steady with both
hands and brace your elbows against
your sides. Shaking or unsteady
hands can blur your shots.
To prevent pictures that are out of fo-
cus or too dark (underexposed), keep
your ngers and other objects away
from the lens, ash, and AF-assist il-
luminator.

41
3
Basic Photography and Playback
Taking Photographs
3
Frame the picture.
4
Focus.
Press the shutter button halfway to
focus.
N
If the subject is poorly lit, the AF-assist
illuminator may light.
Focus
indicator
Focus frame
If the camera is able to focus, it will beep twice and focus area and
focus indicator will glow green. Focus and exposure will lock
while the shutter button is pressed halfway.
If the camera is unable to focus, the focus frame will turn red, s
will be displayed, and the focus indicator will blink white.
5
Shoot.
Smoothly press the shutter button the rest of the way down
to take the picture.

42
3
Basic Photography and Playback
a
Viewing Pictures
Pictures can be viewed in the LCD monitor.
To view pictures full frame, press a.
Additional pictures can be viewed by pressing the focus stick (fo-
cus lever) left or right or rotating the front command dial. Press
the focus stick or rotate the dial right to view pictures in the order
recorded, left to view pictures in reverse order. Keep the focus
stick pressed to scroll rapidly to the desired frame.
N
Pictures taken using other cameras are marked with a m (“gift image”)
icon to warn that they may not display correctly and that playback
zoom may not be available.

43
3
Basic Photography and Playback
b
Deleting Pictures
Use the b button to delete pictures.
O
Deleted pictures cannot be recovered. Copy important pictures to a
computer or other storage device before proceeding.
1
With a picture displayed full frame, press the b button and
select FRAME.
ERASE
FRAME
SELECTED FRAMES
ALL FRAMES
2
Press the focus stick (focus lever) left or right to scroll through
pictures and press MENU/OK to delete (a con rmation dialog is
not displayed). Repeat to delete additional pictures.
N
Protected pictures cannot be deleted. Remove protection from any
pictures you wish to delete (
P
139).
Pictures can also be deleted by A ERASE from playback menu
(
P
136).

44
MEMO

45
Movie Recording and
Playback

46
4
Movie Recording and Playback
F
Recording Movies
This section describes how to lm movies in auto mode.
1
Press the DRIVE button and select F
(MOVIE) from the list of drive mode
options.
2
Press the shutter button to start re-
cording. A recording indicator (V)
and the time remaining are displayed
while recording is in progress.
3
Press the button again to end recording. Recording ends
automatically when the maximum length is reached or the
memory card is full.
O
Use a memory card with a UHS speed class of 3 or better when record-
ing movies.
Touch zoom is not available during movie recording.
The area recorded when ON is selected for W DIGITAL IMAGE
STABILIZER is smaller than that shown in the monitor.
Sound is recorded via the built-in microphone or an optional external
microphone. Do not cover the microphone during recording. Note
that the microphone may pick up lens noise and other sounds made
by the camera during recording.
Vertical or horizontal streaks may appear in movies containing very
bright subjects. This is normal and does not indicate a malfunction.

47
4
Movie Recording and Playback
Recording Movies
N
The indicator lamp lights while recording is in progress.
Exposure compensation can be adjusted by up to ±2EV during movie
recording.
Recording may be unavailable at some settings, while in other cases
settings may not apply during recording.
External microphones can be used (
P
171).
Adjusting Movie Settings
•
Adjust movie settings in the W MOVIE SET-UP menu.
•
The movie type, frame size, and frame rate can be selected us-
ing W MOVIE SET-UP> MOVIE MODE.
•
The AF-area mode for movie recording is selected using
W MOVIE SET-UP> AF MODE; choose from MULTI and AREA.
•
Focus mode is selected using W MOVIE SET-UP> FOCUS
MODE; for continuous focus adjustment, select CONTINUOUS
AF or choose SINGLE AF and enable Intelligent Face Detec-
tion. Intelligent Face Detection is not available in manual focus
mode.
Depth of Field
Manual aperture adjustment is available in shooting modes A and M; adjust
aperture before recording begins. Choose low f-numbers to soften back-
ground details. The e ect can be heightened by increasing the distance
between your subject and the background.

48
4
Movie Recording and Playback
a
Viewing Movies
View movies on the camera.
In full-frame playback, movies are identi-
ed by a W icon. Press the focus stick (fo-
cus lever) down to start movie playback.
01/01/2018 10:00 AM
PLAYPLAY
The following operations can be per-
formed while a movie is displayed:
Focus stick
Focus stick
(focus lever)
(focus lever)
Full-frame playback
Full-frame playback
Playback in progress
Playback in progress
(
(
x
x
)
)
Playback paused
Playback paused
(
(
y
y
)
)
Up
— End playback
Down
Start playback Pause playback
Start/
resume playback
Left/right
View other pictures Adjust speed
Single frame rewind/
advance
Progress is shown in the display during
playback.
O
Do not cover the speaker during playback.
Sound is not played back if OFF is selected
for o SOUND & FLASH.
STOP PAUSE
29m59s
N
Press MENU/OK to pause playback and display volume controls. Press
the focus stick (focus lever) up or down to adjust the volume; press
MENU/OK again to resume playback. Volume can also be adjusted from
the setup menu (
P
148).

49
4
Movie Recording and Playback
Viewing Movies
Playback Speed
Press the focus stick (focus lever) left or right to
adjust playback speed during playback. Speed
is shown by the number of arrows (M or N).
STOP PAUSE
29m59s
Arrows

50
MEMO

51
Taking Photographs

52
5
Taking Photographs
Choosing a Shooting Mode
Choose a shooting mode according to the scene or type
of subject.
S ADVANCED SR AUTO
When the mode dial is rotated to S, the
camera automatically optimizes settings
to suit the scene.
The camera automatically selects the ap-
propriate scene.
Scene
Scene
Scene
Scene
AUTO MACRO
PORTRAIT NIGHT PORTRAIT
LANDSCAPE BACKLIT PORTRAIT
NIGHT
PORTRAIT
O
The mode selected may vary with shooting conditions. If the mode
and subject do not match, select mode P or choose SP and select a
scene manually.
N
Subjects detected by the camera are indicated by green frames; press
the shutter button halfway to focus on the subject in the frame.

53
5
Taking Photographs
Choosing a Shooting Mode
Program AE (P)
Let the camera choose shutter speed and aperture for optimal
exposure. Other values that produce the same exposure can be
selected with program shift.
Rotate the mode dial to P.
P will appear in the display.
P
1000
5.6
12800
Program Shift
Rotate the front command dial to choose the
desired combination of shutter speed and ap-
erture (program shift).
P
1000
5.6
Shutter speed Aperture
O
Program shift is not available if:
•
AUTO is selected for U DYNAMIC RANGE
•
Movie recording is in progress
N
To cancel program shift, turn the camera o .

54
5
Taking Photographs
Shutter-Priority AE (S)
Choose a shutter speed and let the camera adjust aperture for
optimal exposure.
1
Rotate the mode dial to S.
S will appear in the display.
5.6
S
2000
12800
2
Use the front command dial to
choose a shutter speed.
O
If the correct exposure cannot be achieved at the selected shutter
speed, aperture will be displayed in red.

55
5
Taking Photographs
Choosing a Shooting Mode
Long Time-Exposures
A count-down timer is displayed during long
time-exposures.
30”
30
N
Use of a tripod is recommended to prevent blur caused by the camera
moving during the exposure.
To reduce “noise” (mottling) in long time-exposures, select ON for
K LONG EXPOSURE NR. Note that this may increase the time need-
ed to record images after shooting.
You may it helpful to use a remote release for long time-exposures
(
P
171).

56
5
Taking Photographs
Aperture-Priority AE (A)
Choose an aperture and let the camera adjust shutter speed for
optimal exposure.
1
Rotate the mode dial to A.
A will appear in the display.
A
1000
5.6
12800
2
Use the front command dial to
choose an aperture.
O
If the correct exposure cannot be achieved at the selected aperture,
shutter speed will be displayed in red.
Previewing Depth of Field
When PREVIEW DEPTH OF FIELD is assigned
to a function button, pressing the button dis-
plays a L icon and stops aperture down to the
selected setting, allowing depth of eld to be
previewed when the view through the lens ap-
pears in the display.

57
5
Taking Photographs
Choosing a Shooting Mode
Manual Exposure (M)
Alter exposure from that selected by the camera.
1
Rotate the mode dial to M.
M will appear in the display.
01 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 3.0 5.0 10
M
5.6
2000
5
4
3
2
1
0
-1
-2
-3
-4
-5
1.0
12800
2
Rotate the rear command dial to
choose a shutter speed and the front
command dial to choose the aper-
ture.
N
The manual exposure display includes
an exposure indicator that shows the
amount the picture would be under-
or over-exposed at current settings.
Shutter speed
Aperture

58
5
Taking Photographs
Exposure Preview
To preview exposure in the LCD monitor, select ON for A SCREEN
SET-UP> PREVIEW EXP. IN MANUAL MODE. Select OFF when using the
ash or on other occasions on which exposure may change when the pic-
ture is taken.
Bulb (B)
For bulb photography, rotate the rear
command dial to select a shutter speed
of BULB.
01 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 3.0 5.0 10
M
5.6
BULB
5
4
3
2
1
0
-1
-2
-3
-4
-5
12800
N
Use of a tripod is recommended to prevent blur caused by the camera
moving during the exposure.
The shutter will remain open for up to 60minutes, or for 1second
when the electronic shutter is used.
A count-down timer will be displayed while the exposure is in prog-
ress.
To reduce “noise” (mottling) in long time-exposures, select ON for
K LONG EXPOSURE NR. Note that this may increase the time need-
ed to record images after shooting.
You may it helpful to use a remote release for long time-exposures
(
P
171).

59
5
Taking Photographs
Choosing a Shooting Mode
u PANORAMA
Follow an on-screen guide to create a panorama.
1
Rotate the mode dial to u
(PANORAMA).
2
To select the size of the angle through which you will pan the
camera while shooting, press the focus stick (focus lever) left.
Highlight a size and press MENU/OK.
3
Press the focus stick right to view a choice of pan directions.
Highlight a pan direction and press MENU/OK.
4
Press the shutter button all the way down to start recording.
There is no need to keep the shutter button pressed during
recording.
5
Pan the camera in the direction
shown by the arrow. Shooting ends
automatically when the camera is
panned to the end of the guides and
the panorama is complete.
Sweep camera along yellow
line in direction of y
ANGLE DIRECTION
For Best Results
Prop your elbows against your sides and move the camera slowly in a small
circle at a steady speed, keeping the camera parallel or at right angles to
the horizon and being careful only to pan in the direction shown by the
guides. Use a tripod for best results. If the desired results are not achieved,
try panning at a di erent speed.

60
5
Taking Photographs
O
Shooting ends if the shutter button is pressed all the way down during
shooting. No panorama may be recorded if the shutter button is
pressed before the panorama is complete.
Panoramas are created from multiple frames; exposure for the entire
panorama is determined by the rst frame. The camera may in some
cases record an greater or lesser angle than selected or be unable to
stitch the frames together perfectly. The last part of the panorama may
not be recorded if shooting ends before the panorama is complete.
Shooting may be interrupted if the camera is panned too quickly or
too slowly. Panning the camera in a direction other than that shown
cancels shooting.
The desired results may not be achieved with moving subjects, sub-
jects close to the camera, unvarying subjects such as the sky or a eld
of grass, subjects that are in constant motion, such as waves and wa-
terfalls, or subjects that undergo marked changes in brightness. Pan-
oramas may be blurred if the subject is poorly lit.

61
5
Taking Photographs
Choosing a Shooting Mode
Viewing Panoramas
In full-frame playback, you can use the rear command dial to zoom pan-
oramas in or out. Alternatively, you can play the panorama back using the
focus stick (focus lever).
PLAY
STOP PAUSE
Press the focus stick down to start playback and press again to pause. Press
the focus stick left or right to change the pan direction while playback is in
progress or to scroll the panorama while playback is paused; vertical pan-
oramas will scroll vertically, horizontal panoramas horizontally. To exit to
full-frame playback, press the focus stick up.

62
5
Taking Photographs
SP SCENE POSITION /h/M/N/O
The camera o ers a choice of “scenes,” each adapted to particular
shooting conditions or a speci c type of subject.
1
Rotate the mode dial to SP (SCENE
POSITION).
The following scenes can be selected directly using the
mode dial:
Scene
Scene
Description
Description
h
h
PORTRAIT
PORTRAIT
ENHANCER (
ENHANCER (
Z
Z
)
)
Choose for a smooth skin eff ect when shooting por-
traits. If ON is selected for K TOUCH SCREEN
SETTING, you can choose the portrait enhance-
ment level using touch controls.
M
M
LANDSCAPE
LANDSCAPE
Choose for daylight shots of buildings and land-
scapes.
N
N
SPORT
SPORT Choose when photographing moving subjects.
O
O
NIGHT
NIGHT Choose for poorly lit twilight or night scenes.
2
Press MENU/OK to display the shoot-
ing menu and select A SCENE
POSITION.
SCENE POSITION
SHOOTING MENU
EXIT
ISO
AF/MF SETTING
IMAGE SIZE
IMAGE QUALITY
DYNAMIC RANGE
RELEASE TYPE
A menu of scene mode options will
be displayed.
Clear shots of
night scenery with a
slow shutter speed.
NIGHT(TRIPOD)
SCENE POSITION

63
5
Taking Photographs
Choosing a Shooting Mode
N
Scene mode options can also be dis-
played by tapping the scene position
icon in the shooting display.
ᵫᵤ
3
Highlight one of the following options and press MENU/OK.
Scene
Scene
Description
Description
h
h
PORTRAIT
PORTRAIT Choose for portraits.
H
H
NIGHT (TRIPOD)
NIGHT (TRIPOD) Choose this mode for slow shutter speeds when
shooting at night.
p
p
FIREWORKS
FIREWORKS Slow shutter speeds are used to capture the ex-
panding burst of light from a fi rework.
Q
Q
SUNSET
SUNSET Choose this mode to record the vivid colors in sun-
rises and sunsets.
R
R
SNOW
SNOW Choose for crisp, clear shots that capture the
brightness of scenes dominated by shining white
snow.
s
s
BEACH
BEACH Choose for crisp, clear shots that capture the
brightness of sunlit beaches.
U
U
PARTY
PARTY Capture indoor background lighting under low-
light conditions.
V
V
FLOWER
FLOWER Eff ective for taking more vivid shots of fl owers.
W
W
TEXT
TEXT Take clear pictures of text or drawings in print.
j
j
MULTIPLE EXPOSURE
MULTIPLE EXPOSURE Create a photograph that combines two exposures
(
P
64).

64
5
Taking Photographs
j Multiple Exposures
Create a photograph that combines two exposures.
1
Select j MULTIPLE EXPOSURE in the scene position menu.
2
Take the rst shot.
3
Press MENU/OK. The rst shot will be
shown superimposed on the view
through the lens and you will be
prompted to take the second shot.
N
To return to Step2 and retake the rst
shot, press the focus stick (focus le-
ver) left. To save the rst shot and exit
without creating a multiple exposure,
press DISP/BACK.
EXITRETRY
NEXT
4
Take the second shot, using the rst
frame as a guide.
2.030
EXIT
5
Press MENU/OK to create the multiple
exposure, or press the focus stick left
to return to Step4 and retake the sec-
ond shot.
EXITRETRY

65
5
Taking Photographs
Choosing a Shooting Mode
Adv. ADVANCED FILTER
Take photos with lter e ects.
1
Rotate the mode dial to
Adv.(ADVANCED FILTER).
2
Press MENU/OK to display the shoot-
ing menu and select d ADVANCED
FILTER.
ADVANCED FILTER
EXIT
SHOOTING MENU
ISO
AF/MF SETTING
IMAGE SIZE
IMAGE QUALITY
DYNAMIC RANGE
RELEASE TYPE
A menu of advanced lter options
will be displayed.
Create shaded borders
as taken by toycameras.
(nostalgic effect)
TOY CAMERA
ADVANCED FILTER
N
Advanced lter options can also be
displayed by tapping the advanced
lter icon in the shooting display.
ᵫᵤ

66
5
Taking Photographs
Choosing a Shooting Mode
3
Highlight one of the following options and press MENU/OK.
Filter
Filter
Description
Description
G
G
TOY CAMERA
TOY CAMERA Choose for a retro toy camera eff ect.
I
I
POP COLOR
POP COLOR
Create high-contrast images with saturated
colors.
J
J
HIGH-KEY
HIGH-KEY Create bright, low-contrast images.
Z
Z
LOW-KEY
LOW-KEY
Create uniformly dark tones with few areas of
emphasized highlights.
E
E
FISH-EYE
FISH-EYE Create a distorting eff ect of a fi sheye lens.
K
K
DYNAMIC TONE
DYNAMIC TONE
Dynamic tone expression is used for a fantasy
eff ect.
i
i
HDR ART
HDR ART
Create artistic eff ect by emphasizing tone re-
production and dynamic range.
H
H
MINIATURE
MINIATURE
The tops and bottoms of pictures are blurred
for a diorama eff ect.
L
L
CROSS SCREEN
CROSS SCREEN
Create a star pattern where lines radiate out
from bright objects. The eff ects of the cross
screen fi lter can be viewed after shooting.
n
n
RICH & FINE
RICH & FINE
Add a rich & fi ne eff ect recommend for table-
top photography.
m
m
MONOCHROME(NIR)
MONOCHROME(NIR)
Monochrome photography as taken by
Near-infrared camera.
u
u
PARTIAL COLOR (RED)
PARTIAL COLOR (RED)
Areas of the image that are the selected color
are recorded in that color. All other areas of the
image are recorded in black-and-white.
v
v
PARTIAL COLOR (ORANGE)
PARTIAL COLOR (ORANGE)
w
w
PARTIAL COLOR (YELLOW)
PARTIAL COLOR (YELLOW)
x
x
PARTIAL COLOR (GREEN)
PARTIAL COLOR (GREEN)
y
y
PARTIAL COLOR (BLUE)
PARTIAL COLOR (BLUE)
z
z
PARTIAL COLOR (PURPLE)
PARTIAL COLOR (PURPLE)
j
j
FOG REMOVE
FOG REMOVE Create clearer image by removing fog factor.
X
X
SOFT FOCUS
SOFT FOCUS
Create a look that is evenly soft throughout the
whole image.
N
Depending on the subject and camera settings, images may in
some cases be grainy or vary in brightness or hue.

67
5
Taking Photographs
d
Exposure Compensation
Adjust exposure.
Rotate the rear command dial to adjust
exposure.
O
The amount of compensation available varies with the shooting
mode.

68
5
Taking Photographs
J
The Digital Teleconverter
Use the digital teleconverter to further mag-
nify the image while processing it for sharp,
high-resolution results.
1
Assign DIGITAL TELE-CONV. to the control ring.
2
Choose the zoom angle using the
control ring.
Standard (28 mm
*
) 35 mm
*
50 mm
*
* 35 mm format equivalent
3
Take pictures at the selected zoom angle.
N
J DIGITAL TELE-CONV. can also be accessed from the shooting
menu (
P
125).
Image quality drops slightly at DIGITAL TELE-CONV. settings of 35
and 50 mm.
The digital teleconverter may be unavailable in some modes.

69
5
Taking Photographs
I
Continuous Shooting (Burst Mode)
Capture motion in a series of pictures.
1
Press the DRIVE button to display
drive mode options.
2
Press the focus stick (focus lever) up or down to highlight
I CONTINUOUS (
P
70) or e 4K (
P
71).
3
Press the focus stick left or right to choose the frame rate
(J HIGH or O LOW) or 4K recording mode (f 4K BURST or
g MULTI FOCUS MODE).
4
Press MENU/OK to select.
5
Take pictures.

70
5
Taking Photographs
I CONTINUOUS
The camera takes pictures at the selected frame
rate (J HIGH or O LOW) while the shutter button
is pressed. Shooting ends when the shutter button
is released or the memory card is full.
O
If le numbering reaches 999 before shooting is complete, the remain-
ing pictures will be recorded to a new folder.
Burst shooting may not begin if the space available on the memory
card is insu cient.
Frame rate varies with the subject, shutter speed, sensitivity, and focus
mode. Frame rates may slow and recording times increase as more
shots are taken. The ash cannot be used.

71
5
Taking Photographs
Continuous Shooting (Burst Mode)
e 4K
Shoot a burst of 4K pictures and choose which shots to save.
With e 4K highlighted in the drive mode
menu, press the focus stick (focus lever)
left or right to highlight f 4K BURST or
g MULTI FOCUS MODE.
4K BURST
O
Use a memory card with a UHS speed class of 3 or better.
Selecting 4K burst or multi-focus mode reduces the picture angle.
f
4K BURST
Choose the frames you wish to save from a thumb-
nail list.
1
Shoot a burst of pictures with e 4K> f 4K BURST selected
for drive mode.
N
The function performed by the shutter button can be selected
using the R RELEASE TYPE option in the shooting menu.
2
In full-frame playback, display a pic-
ture taken with f 4K BURST. Press
the focus stick (focus lever) down to
view the pictures in the burst as a
thumbnail list.
SELECT IMAGE
3
Press the focus stick left or right to
highlight frames and press the Q but-
ton to save the highlighted frame as
a separate image.
90/360
SWITCH DISPLAY
SAVE EXIT

72
5
Taking Photographs
4
After saving the desired frames, press DISP/BACK to exit the
thumbnail list.
O
If the subject moves during shooting, the image may be distorted,
while banding may occur in images taken under ickering or transient
light sources such as uorescent lights.
N
To prevent motion blur, choose mode S or M and select a fast shutter
speed.
If CONTINUOUS is selected for A SCREEN SET-UP> IMAGE DISP.,
the most recent picture will be displayed when shooting ends, allow-
ing you to select the frames to be saved without exiting to playback
mode.
The ash cannot be used.
g
MULTI FOCUS MODE
Take a series of pictures at di erent focus distance
and create a composite image from selected shots.
1
Shoot a burst of pictures with e 4K> g MULTI FOCUS
MODE selected for drive mode.
N
The camera will shoot a burst of pictures each time the shutter
button is pressed. There is no need to keep the shutter button
pressed during shooting.
2
In full-frame playback, display a pic-
ture taken with g MULTI FOCUS
MODE.
MULTI FOCUS MODE

73
5
Taking Photographs
Continuous Shooting (Burst Mode)
3
Press the focus stick (focus lever) down and choose the shots
that will be used to create the composite image.
Option
Option
Description
Description
SELECT FOCUS
SELECT FOCUS
The area in focus in any given frame is indicated by a
square (w). Highlight a focus point using the focus stick
and press the Q button to create a composite image
from the frames for which the selected area is in focus.
AUTO
AUTO
The camera creates a composite image from the areas
that are in focus.
SELECT RANGE
SELECT RANGE
Create a composite image from the frames in which a
selected area is in focus.
O
A tripod is recommended; if no tripod is available, hold the camera
steady during shooting. If the subject moves during shooting, the im-
age may be distorted or unnatural, while banding may occur in imag-
es taken under ickering or transient light sources such as uorescent
lights. The process of creating a composite image reduces the angle of
view. The desired results may not be achieved with moving subjects,
distant landscapes, or subjects that lack depth.
N
If CONTINUOUS is selected for A SCREEN SET-UP> IMAGE DISP.,
the most recent picture will be displayed when shooting ends, al-
lowing you to create a composite image without exiting to playback
mode.
The ash cannot be used.

74
5
Taking Photographs
I
Bracketing
Automatically vary settings over a series of
pictures.
1
Press the DRIVE button to display
drive mode options.
2
Press the focus stick (focus lever) up or down to highlight one
of the following:
Option
Option
P
P
O
O
AE BKT
AE BKT 75
W
W
ISO BKT
ISO BKT 75
X
X
FILM SIMULATION BKT
FILM SIMULATION BKT 75
Option
Option
P
P
V
V
WHITE BALANCE BKT
WHITE BALANCE BKT 75
Y
Y
DYNAMIC RANGE BKT
DYNAMIC RANGE BKT 76
h
h
HDR
HDR 76
3
Press the focus stick left or right to highlight the desired
bracketing settings.
N
Bracketing settings for AE and lm simulation bracketing are se-
lected using the S AE BKT SETTING and X FILM SIMULATION
BKT options in the shooting menu.
4
Press MENU/OK to select.
5
Take pictures.

75
5
Taking Photographs
Bracketing
O AE BKT
Use S AE BKT SETTING to choose the bracketing amount and
number of shots. Each time the shutter button is pressed, the
camera will take the speci ed number of shots: one using the
metered value for exposure and the others over- or under-ex-
posed by multiples of the selected bracketing amount.
N
Regardless of the bracketing amount, exposure will not exceed the
limits of the exposure metering system.
W ISO BKT
Select a bracketing amount (±1, ±⁄, or ±⁄). Each time the shut-
ter is released, the camera will take a picture at the current sen-
sitivity and process it to create two additional copies, one with
sensitivity raised and the other with sensitivity lowered by the
selected amount.
X FILM SIMULATION BKT
Each time the shutter is released, the camera takes one shot and
processes it to create a total of three copies with di erent lm
simulation settings, chosen using the X FILM SIMULATION BKT
option in the shooting menu.
V WHITE BALANCE BKT
Select a bracketing amount (±1, ±2, or ±3). Each time the shutter
is released, the camera takes one shot and processes it to create
three copies: one at the current white balanced setting, one with
ne-tuning increased by the selected amount, and another with
ne-tuning decreased by the selected amount.

76
5
Taking Photographs
Bracketing
Y DYNAMIC RANGE BKT
Each time the shutter button is pressed, the camera takes three
shots with di erent dynamic ranges: 100% for the rst, 200% for
the second, and 400% for the third.
N
While dynamic range bracketing is in e ect, sensitivity will be restrict-
ed to a minimum of ISO800 (or to a minimum of ISO200 to 800 when
an auto option is selected for sensitivity); the sensitivity previously in
e ect is restored when bracketing ends.
h HDR
Each time the shutter button is pressed, the camera takes multi-
ple shots at di erent exposures and combines them into a single
high–dynamic-range image, reducing loss of detail in highlights
and shadows. Choose the amount the camera varies exposure
from AUTO, 1.0 EV, 1.5 EV, 2.0 EV, 2.5 EV, and 3.0 EV.
O
Keep the camera steady. If the camera is moved or the subject chang-
es during shooting, the shots may be recorded separately instead of
being combined into a single image. The camera may fail to record an
image if the subject moves during shooting.
N
The camera displays the combined image after shooting. Press
MENU/OK to save the image or DISP/BACK to end HDR shooting without
recording the image.

77
5
Taking Photographs
Autofocus
Take pictures using autofocus.
1
Use F AF/MF SETTING> FOCUS MODE to choose a focus
mode (
P
78).
2
Use F AF/MF SETTING> AF MODE to choose an AF mode
(
P
80).
3
Choose the position and size of the
focus frame (
P
82).
4
Take pictures.
N
For information on the autofocus system, visit:
http://fujifilm-x.com/af/en/index.html

78
5
Taking Photographs
Focus Mode
Use the FOCUS MODE option in the F AF/MF SETTING menu to
choose how the camera focuses.
1
Press MENU/OK to display the menus.
2
Select F AF/MF SETTING> FOCUS MODE in the shooting
menu.
3
Choose from the following options:
Mode
Mode
Description
Description
p
p
MANUAL FOCUS
Focus manually using the control ring. Choose for manual
control of focus or in situations in which the camera is un-
able to focus using autofocus (
P
88).
k
k
CONTINUOUS AF
Focus is continually adjusted to refl ect changes in the dis-
tance to the subject while the shutter button is pressed
halfway. Use for subjects that are in motion. Eye-detection
AF is not available.
l
l
SINGLE AF
Focus locks while the shutter button is pressed halfway.
Choose for stationary subjects.
N
If ON is selected for F AF/MF SETTING> PRE-AF, focus will be ad-
justed continuously in modes l and k even when the shutter but-
ton is not pressed.

79
5
Taking Photographs
Autofocus
The Focus Indicator
The focus indicator turns green when the sub-
ject is in focus and blinks white when the cam-
era is unable to focus. Brackets (“( )”) indicate
that the camera is focusing and are displayed
continuously in mode k. j is displayed in
manual focus mode.
1000
5.6
P
12800
Focus indicator

80
5
Taking Photographs
Autofocus Options (AF Mode)
Choose how the camera focuses in modes l and k.
1
Press MENU/OK and go to the shooting menu.
2
Select F AF/MF SETTING> AF MODE.
3
Choose an AF mode.
How the camera focuses depends on the focus mode.
Focus Mode
Focus Mode
l
l
(SINGLE AF)
(SINGLE AF)
Option
Option
Description
Description
Sample image
Sample image
r
SINGLE POINT
Camera focuses on subject in
selected focus point. Use for pin-
point focus on selected subject.
y
ZONE
Camera focuses on subject in se-
lected focus zone. Focus zones in-
clude multiple focus points, mak-
ing it easier to focus on subjects in
motion.
z
WIDE
Camera focuses automatically on
high-contrast subjects; display
shows areas in focus.
j
ALL
Rotate the rear command dial in the focus-point selection dis-
play (
P
83, 84) to cycle through AF modes in the follow-
ing order: r SINGLE POINT, y ZONE, and z WIDE.

81
5
Taking Photographs
Autofocus
Focus Mode
Focus Mode
k
k
(CONTINUOUS AF)
(CONTINUOUS AF)
Option
Option
Description
Description
Sample image
Sample image
r
SINGLE POINT
Focus tracks subject at selected fo-
cus point. Use for subjects moving
toward or away from camera.
y
ZONE
Focus tracks subject in selected fo-
cus zone. Use for subjects that are
moving fairly predictably.
z
TRACKING
Focus tracks subjects moving
through wide area of frame.
j
ALL
Rotate the rear command dial in the focus-point selection dis-
play (
P
83, 84) to cycle through AF modes in the follow-
ing order: r SINGLE POINT, y ZONE, and z TRACKING.

82
5
Taking Photographs
Focus-Point Selection
Choose a focus point for autofocus.
Viewing the Focus-Point Display
1
Press the center of the focus stick
(focus lever) to view the focus-point
display.
2
Use the focus stick to position the
focus frame over the desired focus
point.
N
Focus-area selection can also be accessed via the shooting menu.

83
5
Taking Photographs
Autofocus
Selecting a Focus Point
Use the focus stick (focus lever) to choose
the focus point and the rear command
dial to choose the size of the focus frame.
The procedure varies with the option se-
lected for AF mode.
AF mode
AF mode
Focus stick
Focus stick
Rear command dial
Rear command dial
Tilt
Tilt
Press
Press
Rotate
Rotate
r
r
Select focus point
Select center focus
point
Choose from 5 frame sizes
y
y
Choose from 3 frame sizes
z
z
—
N
Manual focus-point selection is not available when z WIDE/
TRACKING is selected in focus mode l.
If j ALL is selected for AF MODE, you can rotate the rear command
dial in the focus-point selection display (
P
84) to cycle through
AF modes in the following order: r SINGLE POINT (5frame sizes),
y ZONE (3 frame sizes), and either z WIDE (focus mode l) or
z TRACKING (focus mode k).

84
5
Taking Photographs
The Focus-Point Display
The focus-point display varies with the option selected for AF
mode.
N
Focus frames are shown by small squares (), focus zones by the large
squares.
AF mode
AF mode
r
r
SINGLE POINT
SINGLE POINT
y
y
ZONE
ZONE
z
z
WIDE/TRACKING
WIDE/TRACKING
Choose single focus point. Choose from zones with
7 × 7, 5 × 5, or 3 × 3 focus
points.
Position focus frame over
subject and press MENU/OK.
Available Focus Points
TTL contrast-detect AF o ers more focus points (
A
)
than intelligent hybrid AF (
B
), which combines
phase-detection with TTL contrast-detect AF.
BA
Burst Mode Focus-Frame Selection
When continuous high-speed (J) is selected for drive mode, the number
of focus frames available in focus mode k drops.
Single point Zone Tracking

85
5
Taking Photographs
Autofocus
Autofocus
Although the camera boasts a high-precision autofocus system, it may be
unable to focus on the subjects listed below.
•
Very shiny subjects such as mirrors or car bodies.
•
Subjects photographed through a window or other re ective object.
•
Dark subjects and subjects that absorb rather than re ect light, such as
hair or fur.
•
Insubstantial subjects, such as smoke or ame.
•
Subjects that show little contrast with the background.
•
Subjects positioned in front of or behind a high-contrast object that is
also in the focus frame (for example, a subject photographed against a
backdrop of highly contrasting elements).
Checking Focus
To zoom in for precise focus, press the control
to which FOCUS CHECK is currently assigned.
Press the control a second time to change
the zoom ratio and again to cancel zoom. The
zoom display is centered on the current focus
area. The focus area can be selected using fo-
cus-point selection. At default settings, FOCUS
CHECK is assigned to the Fn2 (function 2) but-
ton.
Normal display Focus zoom
N
In focus mode l, zoom can be adjusted by rotating the rear com-
mand dial. Focus zoom is not available in focus mode k or when
F AF/MF SETTING> PRE-AF is on or an option other than SINGLE
POINT is selected for AF MODE. Use h BUTTON SETTING>
FUNCTION (Fn) SETTING to change the control to which FOCUS
CHECK is assigned.

86
5
Taking Photographs
Focus/Exposure Lock
Compose photographs with o -center sub-
jects.
1
Focus: Position the subject in the fo-
cus frame and press the shutter but-
ton halfway to lock focus and expo-
sure. Focus and exposure will remain
locked while the shutter button is
pressed halfway (AF/AE lock).
2
Recompose: Keep the shutter button
pressed halfway.
3
Shoot: Press the button all the way down.

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5
Taking Photographs
Focus/Exposure Lock
AE/AF LOCK
If AE-LOCK, AF-LOCK, or AE/AF LOCK is
assigned to the Fn button, the focus and/
or exposure will lock while the Fn button
is pressed and remain locked even when
the shutter button is pressed halfway.

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5
Taking Photographs
Manual Focus
Adjust focus manually.
1
Select MANUAL FOCUS for F AF/MF
SETTING> FOCUS MODE.
j will appear in the display.
01 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 3.0 5.0 10
M
5.6
2000
5
4
3
2
1
0
-1
-2
-3
-4
-5
1.0
12800
2
Focus manually using the control
ring. Rotate the ring left to reduce
the focus distance, right to increase.
3
Take pictures.
N
Use the I FOCUS RING option in the setup menu to reverse the di-
rection of rotation of the control ring.
INSTANT AF can be assigned to a function button, allowing the but-
ton to be used to focus on the subject in the selected focus frame.
Choose this option for quick focus. Use h BUTTON SETTING>
FUNCTION (Fn) SETTING to change the control to which INSTANT
AF is assigned.

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5
Taking Photographs
Manual Focus
Checking Focus
A variety of options are available for checking focus in manual
focus mode.
The Manual Focus Indicator
The manual focus indicator indicates how
closely the focus distance matches the
distance to the subject in the focus brack-
ets. The white line indicates the distance
to the subject in the focus area (in meters
or feet according to the option selected
for
A
SCREEN SET-UP> FOCUS SCALE UNITS in the setup menu),
the blue bar the depth of eld, or in other words the distance in
front of and behind the subject that appears to be in focus.
N
If both AF DISTANCE INDICATOR and MF DISTANCE INDICATOR are
selected in the
A SCREEN SET-UP> DISP. CUSTOM SETTING list,
depth of eld can also be previewed using the depth-of- eld indicator
in the standard display. Use the DISP/BACK button to display standard
indicators.
Focus Zoom
If ON is selected for A SCREEN SET-UP> FOCUS CHECK, press-
ing the button to which FOCUS CHECK is assigned automatical-
ly zooms the display in so you can focus with greater precision.
Press the control a second time to change the zoom ratio and
again to cancel zoom. The zoom display is centered on the cur-
rent focus area. The focus area can be selected using focus-point
selection. At default settings, FOCUS CHECK is assigned to the
Fn2 (function 2) button.
N
Use h BUTTON SETTING> FUNCTION (Fn) SETTING to change the
control to which FOCUS CHECK is assigned.
Focus distance
(white line)
5.6
Depth of eld

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5
Taking Photographs
Manual Focus
Focus Peaking
Select FOCUS PEAK HIGHLIGHT for c MF ASSIST to highlight
high-contrast outlines. When focusing, rotate the control ring
until the subject is highlighted.

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5
Taking Photographs
Using the Flash
Use the built-in ash for additional lighting
when shooting at night or indoors under low
light.
1
Press MENU/OK to display the shooting menu.
2
Highlight p FLASH SET-UP> FLASH MODE in the shooting
menu and press MENU/OK to view ash options.
3
Highlight one of the following options and press MENU/OK.
Mode
Mode
Description
Description
AUTO
AUTO
(Auto ash)
(Auto ash)
The fl ash fi res when required. Recommended
in most situations.
K
K
RED EYE REDUCTION
RED EYE REDUCTION
*
*
N
N
L
L
FORCED FLASH
FORCED FLASH
FORCED FLASH
FORCED FLASH
*
*
The fl ash fi res whenever a picture is taken. Use
for backlit subjects or for natural coloration
when shooting in bright light.
O
O
M
M
SLOW SYNCHRO
SLOW SYNCHRO
RED EYE & SLOW
RED EYE & SLOW
*
*
Capture both the main subject and the back-
ground under low light (note that brightly lit
scenes may be overexposed).
l
l
d
d
2ND CURTAIN SYNC.
2ND CURTAIN SYNC.
2ND CURTAIN SYNC.
2ND CURTAIN SYNC.
*
*
The fl ash fi res immediately before the shutter
closes.
D
D
COMMANDER
COMMANDER
The built-in fl ash can be used to control op-
tional remote fl ash units.
P
P
SUPPRESSED FLASH
SUPPRESSED FLASH
The fl ash does not fi re even when the subject is
poorly lit. A tripod is recommended.
* Red-eye removal is available in these modes when Intelligent Face De-
tection is active and red-eye removal is on. Red-eye removal minimizes
“red-eye” caused when light from the fl ash is refl ected from the subject’s
retinas.
N
If p is displayed when the shutter button is pressed halfway, the ash
will re when the photo is taken.
Except in commander mode, the ash may re several times with each
shot. Do not move the camera until shooting is complete.

92
5
Taking Photographs
WB
White Balance
For natural colors, choose a white balance
option that matches the light source.
1
Press MENU/OK to display the shooting menu.
2
Highlight D WHITE BALANCE in the shooting menu and
press MENU/OK to view white balance options.
3
Highlight a white balance option.
•
Press MENU/OK to view a WB SHIFT
display where white balance can
be ne-tuned using the focus stick
(focus lever).
•
Press DISP/BACK to select the high-
lighted option and exit without ap-
plying ne-tuning.
R:0 B:0
SET
WB SHIFT AUTO

93
5
Taking Photographs
White Balance
WHITE BALANCE
The following white balance options are available.
Option
Option
Description
Description
AUTO White balance is adjusted automatically.
h
Measure a value for white balance.
k
Choose a color temperature.
i
For subjects in direct sunlight.
j
For subjects in the shade.
k
Use under “daylight” fl uorescent lights.
l
Use under “warm white” fl uorescent lights.
m
Use under “cool white” fl uorescent lights.
n
Use under incandescent lighting.
g
Reduces the blue cast typically associated with underwater light-
ing.
N
Results vary with shooting conditions. Play pictures back after shoot-
ing to check colors.
White balance is adjusted for ash lighting only in AUTO and g
modes. Turn the ash o using other white balance options.

94
5
Taking Photographs
Custom White Balance
Choose h to adjust white balance for
unusual lighting conditions. White bal-
ance measurement options will be dis-
played; frame a white object so that it lls
the display and press the shutter button
all the way down to measure white bal-
ance (to select the most recent custom value and exit without
measuring white balance, press DISP/BACK, or press MENU/OK to se-
lect the most recent value and display the ne-tuning dialog).
•
If “COMPLETED!” is displayed, press MENU/OK to set white balance to
the measured value.
•
If “UNDER” is displayed, raise exposure compensation and try again.
•
If “OVER” is displayed, lower exposure compensation and try again.
CUSTOM WB
SHUTTER : NEW WB
SHIFT NOT CHANGE

95
5
Taking Photographs
White Balance
k: Color Temperature
Selecting k in the white balance menu
displays a list of color temperatures;
highlight a color temperature and press
MENU/OK to select the highlighted option
and display the ne-tuning dialog.
10000
K
9100
K
8300
K
7700
K
7100
K
WHITE BALANCE
COLOR TEMPERATURE
R:0 B:0
SET SHIFT
Color Temperature
Color temperature is an objective measure of the color of a light source,
expressed in Kelvin (K). Light sources with a color temperature close to that
of direct sunlight appear white; light sources with a lower color tempera-
ture have a yellow or red cast, while those with a higher color temperature
are tinged with blue. You can match color temperature to the light source,
or choose options that di er sharply from the color of the light source to
make pictures “warmer” or “colder.”

96
5
Taking Photographs
h
Using the Self Timer
Use the timer for group- or self-portraits, to
prevent blur caused by camera shake, or to
release the shutter automatically when se-
lected conditions are met.
1
Press MENU/OK to display the shooting menu.
2
Highlight B SELF-TIMER in the shooting menu and press
MENU/OK.
3
Highlight one of the following options and press MENU/OK.
Option
Option
P
P
R
R
2 SEC
2 SEC 97
S
S
10 SEC
10 SEC 97
m
m
FACE AUTO SHUTTER
FACE AUTO SHUTTER 97
o
o
SMILE
SMILE 98
Option
Option
P
P
a
a
BUDDY
BUDDY 98
g
g
GROUP
GROUP 99
OFF
OFF —
O
Stand behind the camera when using the shutter button. Standing in
front of the lens can interfere with focus and exposure.
The self-timer turns o automatically when the camera is turned o .
N
To stop the timer before the picture is taken, press DISP/BACK.
Selecting m FACE AUTO SHUTTER, o SMILE, a BUDDY, or
g GROUP sets F AF/MF SETTING> FACE/EYE DETECTION
SETTING to FACE ON/EYE OFF. The original setting is restored when
the self timer is turned o .

97
5
Taking Photographs
Using the Self Timer
2 SEC/10 SEC
The shutter is released 2 or 10 seconds after the shutter button
is pressed.
1
Highlight either of the following options in the self-timer
menu and press MENU/OK.
Option
Option
Description
Description
R
R
2 SEC
2 SEC
The shutter is released two seconds after the shutter button
is pressed. Use to reduce blur caused by the camera moving
when the shutter button is pressed. The self-timer lamp blinks
as the timer counts down.
S
S
10 SEC
10 SEC
The shutter is released ten seconds after the shutter button
is pressed. Use for photographs in which you wish to appear
yourself. The self-timer lamp blinks immediately before the pic-
ture is taken.
2
Press the shutter button all the way down to start the timer.
A count-down timer will appear in the display; the picture
will be taken when the timer expires.
FACE AUTO SHUTTER
The picture will be taken when the camera detects a portrait sub-
ject facing the lens.
1
Highlight m (FACE AUTO SHUTTER) in the self-timer menu
and press MENU/OK.
2
Frame a portrait subject in the dis-
play. The camera will initiate face de-
tection and release the shutter when
the subject is facing the lens.
O
The camera may fail to detect subjects who are not facing the camera
or whose eyes are hidden.

98
5
Taking Photographs
SMILE
The camera releases the shutter when the subject smiles.
1
Highlight o (SMILE) in the self-timer menu and press
MENU/OK.
2
Frame portrait subjects in the dis-
play. The camera will initiate face de-
tection and release the shutter when
any of the subjects smiles.
O
The camera may fail to detect subjects who are not facing the camera
or whose eyes are obscured by hair or other objects.
BUDDY
The camera takes a picture when it detects two subjects close
together.
1
Highlight
a
(BUDDY) in the self-timer menu and press MENU/OK.
2
When prompted to choose how close
the subjects must be together before
the timer starts, highlight the desired
option and press MENU/OK (the required
degree of closeness is shown by heart
icons in the shooting display: the more
hearts, the closer together the subjects must be).
•
LV.1 (NEAR): The timer starts when the subjects are close
enough to link hands.
•
LV.2 (CLOSE UP): The timer starts when the subjects are shoul-
der-to-shoulder.
•
LV.3 (SUPER CLOSE): The timer starts when the subjects are
cheek-to-cheek.
N
The timer starts only when the subjects are su ciently close together;
the shutter is released one second later.
EXIT

99
5
Taking Photographs
Using the Self Timer
GROUP
The camera takes a picture when it detects the selected number
of portrait subjects.
1
Highlight
g
(GROUP) in the self-timer menu and press MENU/OK.
2
Highlight the desired number of sub-
jects (1 to 4) and press MENU/OK (the
number of subjects is indicated by
h icons in the shooting display). The
timer starts only when the selected
number of subjects is in the frame; the
shutter is released two seconds later.
EXIT

100
MEMO

101
The Shooting Menus

102
6
The Shooting Menus
SHOOTING MENU (A/B/C/D/E)
Adjust shooting settings.
The shooting menu is displayed when
you press MENU/OK in shooting mode.
Choose from tabs A, B, C, D, or
E.
EXIT
SHOOTING MENU
ISO
AF/MF SETTING
PROGRAM AE
IMAGE SIZE
IMAGE QUALITY
DYNAMIC RANGE
P
RELEASE TYPE
N
The options available vary with the shooting mode selected.
A SCENE POSITION
Choose a scene for SP mode (
P
62).
d ADVANCED FILTER
Choose an advanced lter for Adv. mode (
P
65).
F AF/MF SETTING
Adjust focus settings.
FOCUS AREA
FOCUS AREA
Choose the focus area for autofocus, manual focus, and focus
zoom (
P
82).
FOCUS MODE
FOCUS MODE
Choose how the camera focuses (
P
78).
AF MODE
AF MODE
Choose the AF mode for focus modes l and k (
P
80).

103
6
The Shooting Menus
SHOOTING MENU
SNAPSHOT
SNAPSHOT
Focus is xed at the selected distance—5m (5 meters) or
2m (2 meters)—allowing pictures to be taken as soon as the
shutter button is pressed all the way down. Choosing this option
helps ensure that you won’t miss the chance to take a shot.
Options
Options
5m 2m OFF
O
Both auto and manual focus are disabled.
N
Use touch function button T-Fn1 ( ick up) to change the focus distance
during shooting.
RELEASE/FOCUS PRIORITY
RELEASE/FOCUS PRIORITY
Choose how the camera focuses in focus mode AF-S (l) or
AF-C(k).
Option
Option
Description
Description
RELEASE
Shutter response is prioritized over focus. Pictures can be taken
when the camera is not in focus.
FOCUS
Focus is prioritized over shutter response. Pictures can be only
taken when the camera is in focus.
AF+MF
AF+MF
If ON is selected and focus is locked by, for example, keeping the shut-
ter button pressed halfway when SINGLE AF is selected for FOCUS
MODE, focus can be adjusted manually by rotating the control ring.
Options
Options
ON OFF
N
Focus peaking can be used to check focus. To enable focus peaking,
select FOCUS PEAK HIGHLIGHT for c MF ASSIST.
AF+MF Focus Zoom
When ON is selected for A SCREEN SET-UP> FOCUS CHECK and SINGLE
POINT selected for AF MODE, focus zoom can be used to zoom in on the
selected focus area.

104
6
The Shooting Menus
FACE/EYE DETECTION SETTING
FACE/EYE DETECTION SETTING
Intelligent Face Detection sets focus and
exposure for human faces anywhere in
the frame, preventing the camera from
focusing on the background in group
portraits. Choose for shots that em-
phasize portrait subjects. Faces can be
detected with the camera in vertical or
horizontal orientation; if a face is detected, it will be indicated
by a green border. If there is more than one face in the frame,
the camera will select the face closest to the center; other faces
are indicated by white borders. You can also choose whether the
camera detects and focuses on eyes when Intelligent Face Detec-
tion is on. Choose from the following options:
Option
Option
Description
Description
FACE ON/EYE OFF Intelligent Face Detection only.
FACE ON/EYE AUTO
The camera automatically chooses which eye to fo-
cus on when a face is detected.
FACE ON/RIGHT EYE PRIORITY
The camera focuses on the right eye of subjects de-
tected using Intelligent Face Detection.
FACE ON/LEFT EYE PRIORITY
The camera focuses on the left eye of subjects de-
tected using Intelligent Face Detection.
FACE OFF/EYE OFF Intelligent Face Detection and eye priority off .
O
In some modes, the camera may set exposure for the frame as a whole
rather than the portrait subject.
If the subject moves as the shutter button is pressed, the face may not
be in the area indicated by the green border when the picture is taken.
N
If the camera is unable to detect the subject’s eyes because they are
hidden by hair, glasses, or other objects, the camera will instead focus
on faces.

105
6
The Shooting Menus
SHOOTING MENU
PRE-AF
PRE-AF
If ON is selected, the camera will continue to adjust focus even
when the shutter button is not pressed halfway. Note that this
increases the drain on the battery.
Options
Options
ON OFF
AF ILLUMINATOR
AF ILLUMINATOR
If ON is selected, the AF-assist illuminator will light to assist aut-
ofocus.
Options
Options
ON OFF
O
The AF-assist illuminator turns o automatically when OFF is selected
for o SOUND & FLASH in the setup menu.
The camera may be unable to focus using the AF-assist illuminator
in some cases. If the camera is unable to focus, try increasing the dis-
tance to the subject.
Avoid shining the AF-assist illuminator directly into your subject’s eyes.

106
6
The Shooting Menus
R RELEASE TYPE
Choose how the shutter button functions when e 4K> f 4K
BURST is selected as the drive mode.
Option
Option
Description
Description
WHEN PRESSING Pictures are taken while the shutter button is pressed.
ON/OFF SWITCH
Shooting starts when the shutter button is pressed and ends
when the button is pressed a second time.
PRE RECORD
The camera starts saving frames to a memory buff er when the
shutter button is pressed halfway. When the shutter button
is pressed the rest of the way down, the camera transfers the
frames shot in the previous second to the memory card and con-
tinues shooting until the shutter button is released.
N ISO
Adjust the camera’s sensitivity to light.
Option
Option
Description
Description
AUTO1
AUTO2
AUTO3
Sensitivity is automatically adjusted in response to shooting
conditions. Choose the base sensitivity, maximum sensitivity,
and minimum shutter speed for AUTO1, AUTO2, and AUTO3.
12800–200 Adjust sensitivity manually. Selected value is shown in display.
H (25600/51200),
L (100)
Choose for special situations. Note that mottling may appear in
pictures taken at H, while L reduces dynamic range.
N
Sensitivity is not reset when the camera is turned o .
If a RAW option is selected for image quality, pictures taken with L
selected for N ISO will be recorded at ISO 200, while those taken with
H selected will be recorded at ISO 12800.

107
6
The Shooting Menus
SHOOTING MENU
Adjusting Sensitivity
High values can be used to reduce blur when lighting is poor, while lower
values allow slower shutter speeds or wider apertures in bright light; note,
however, that mottling may appear in pictures taken at high sensitivities.
AUTO
Choose the base sensitivity, maximum sensitivity, and minimum
shutter speed for AUTO1, AUTO2, and AUTO3. Defaults are
shown below.
Item
Item
Options
Options
Default
Default
AUTO1
AUTO1
AUTO2
AUTO2
AUTO3
AUTO3
DEFAULT SENSITIVITY 6400–200 200
MAX. SENSITIVITY 6400–400 800 1600 3200
MIN. SHUTTER SPEED ⁄–¼ SEC, AUTO AUTO
The camera automatically chooses a sensitivity between the de-
fault and maximum values; sensitivity is only raised above the
default value if the shutter speed required for optimal exposure
would be slower than the value selected for MIN. SHUTTER
SPEED.
N
If the value selected for DEFAULT SENSITIVITY is higher than that se-
lected for MAX. SENSITIVITY, DEFAULT SENSITIVITY will be set to
the value selected for MAX. SENSITIVITY.
The camera may select shutter speeds slower than MIN. SHUTTER
SPEED if pictures would still be underexposed at the value selected
for MAX. SENSITIVITY. The minimum shutter speed is not a ected by
the option selected for image stabilization.

108
6
The Shooting Menus
O IMAGE SIZE
Choose the size and aspect ratio at which still pictures are recorded.
Option
Option
Image size
Image size
O 3 : 2 6000 × 4000
P 3 : 2 4240 × 2832
Q 3 : 2 3008 × 2000
Option
Option
Image size
Image size
O 16 : 9 6000 × 3376
P 16 : 9 4240 × 2384
Q 16 : 9 3008 × 1688
Option
Option
Image size
Image size
O 1 : 1 4000 × 4000
P 1 : 1 2832 × 2832
Q 1 : 1 2000 × 2000
N
IMAGE SIZE is not reset when the camera is turned o or another
shooting mode is selected.
Aspect Ratio
Pictures with an aspect ratio of 3∶2 have the same proportions as a frame of
35 mm lm, while an aspect ratio of 16∶9 is suited to display on High De ni-
tion (HD) devices. Pictures with an aspect ratio of 1∶1 are square.
Selecting 1 : 1
To switch to an aspect ratio of 1 : 1 before taking pictures, simply press the
control to which SQUARE MODE(1:1) is assigned (
P
167). Press the
control again to restore the previously-selected aspect ratio. At default set-
tings, square mode is assigned to touch function button T-Fn2 ( ick left).
Current image size
Current image size
Image size selected using control to which
Image size selected using control to which
SQUARE MODE(1:1)
SQUARE MODE(1:1)
is assigned
is assigned
O 3 : 2 or O 16 : 9 O 1 : 1
P 3 : 2 or P 16 : 9 P 1 : 1
Q 3 : 2 or Q 16 : 9 Q 1 : 1

109
6
The Shooting Menus
SHOOTING MENU
T IMAGE QUALITY
Choose a le format and compression ratio. Select FINE or
NORMAL to record JPEG images, RAW to record RAW images, or
FINE+RAW or NORMAL+RAW to record both JPEG and RAW im-
ages. FINE and FINE+RAW use lower JPEG compression ratios for
higher-quality JPEG images, while NORMAL and NORMAL+RAW
use higher JPEG compression ratios to increase the number of
images that can be stored.
The Function Buttons
To toggle RAW image quality on or o for a single shot, assign RAW to a
function button (
P
167). If a JPEG option is currently selected for image
quality, pressing the button temporarily selects the equivalent JPEG+RAW
option. If a JPEG+RAW option is currently selected, pressing the button
temporarily selects the equivalent JPEG option, while if RAW is selected,
pressing the button temporarily selects FINE. Taking a picture or pressing
the button again restores the previous setting.

110
6
The Shooting Menus
U DYNAMIC RANGE
Control contrast. Choose lower values to increase contrast
when shooting indoors or under overcast skies, higher values
to reduce loss of detail in highlights and shadows when photo-
graphing high-contrast scenes. Higher values are recommended
for scenes that include both sunlight and deep shade, for such
high-contrast subjects as sunlight on water, brightly-lit autumn
leaves, and portraits taken against a blue sky, and for white ob-
jects or people wearing white; note, however, that mottling may
appear in pictures taken at higher values.
Options
Options
AUTO V 100% W 200% X 400%
N
If AUTO is selected, the camera will automatically choose either
V 100% or W 200% according to the subject and shooting condi-
tions. Shutter speed and aperture will be displayed when the shutter
button is pressed halfway.
W 200% is available at sensitivities of ISO400 and above, X 400%
at sensitivities of ISO800 and above.

111
6
The Shooting Menus
SHOOTING MENU
P FILM SIMULATION
Simulate the e ects of di erent kinds of lm, including black-
and-white (with or without color lters). Choose a palette ac-
cording to your subject and creative intent.
Option
Option
Description
Description
c
PROVIA/STANDARD
Standard color reproduction. Suited to a wide range of
subjects, from portraits to landscapes.
d
Velvia/VIVID
A high-contrast palette of saturated colors, suited to
nature photos.
e
ASTIA/SOFT
Enhances the range of hues available for skin tones in
portraits while preserving the bright blues of daylight
skies. Recommended for outdoor portrait photography.
i
CLASSIC CHROME
Soft color and enhanced shadow contrast for a calm
look.
g
PRO Neg. Hi
Off ers slightly more contrast than h (PRO Neg. Std).
Recommended for outdoor portrait photography.
h
PRO Neg. Std
A soft-toned palette. The range of hues available for skin
tones is enhanced, making this a good choice for studio
portrait photography.
b
MONOCHROME Take pictures in standard black and white.
e
MONOCHROME +
Ye FILTER
Take black-and-white pictures with slightly increased
contrast. This setting also slightly tones down the
brightness of the sky.
d
MONOCHROME +
RFILTER
Take black-and-white pictures with increased contrast.
This setting also tones down the brightness of the sky.
f
MONOCHROME +
GFILTER
Soften skin tones in black-and-white portraits.
f
SEPIA Take pictures in sepia.
N
Film simulation options can be combined with tone and sharpness
settings.
For more information, visit: http://fujifilm-x.com/en/x-stories/the-world-
of-film-simulation-episode-1/

112
6
The Shooting Menus
X FILM SIMULATION BKT
Choose the three lm simulation types used for lm simulation
bracketing (
P
75, 111).
Options
Options
c
PROVIA/STANDARD
d
Velvia/VIVID
e
ASTIA/SOFT
i
CLASSIC CHROME
g
PRO Neg. Hi
h
PRO Neg. Std
b
MONOCHROME
e
MONOCHROME +
Ye FILTER
d
MONOCHROME +
R FILTER
f
MONOCHROME + G FILTER
f
SEPIA
B SELF-TIMER
Use the timer for group- or self-portraits, to prevent blur caused
by camera shake, or to release the shutter automatically when
selected conditions are met (
P
96).

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6
The Shooting Menus
SHOOTING MENU
o INTERVAL TIMER SHOOTING
Con gure the camera to take photos automatically at a preset
interval. If desired, frames shot using interval timer shooting can
be joined to form a time-lapse movie.
1
Highlight o INTERVAL TIMER SHOOTING in the shooting
menu and press MENU/OK.
2
Use the focus stick (focus lever) to
choose the interval and number of
shots. Press MENU/OK to proceed.
INTERVAL/NUMBER OF TIMES
INTERVAL NUMBER OF TIMES
END CANCEL
001
2
1
24
23
0
01 00
hms
3
Highlight one of the following re-
cording types and press MENU/OK.
•
STILL: Each photo is recorded sep-
arately.
•
STILL + TIME-LAPSE MOVIE: Each
photo is recorded separately; in
addition, the entire sequence is re-
corded as a time-lapse movie.
RECORDING MODE
SETTING
STILL+TIME-LAPSE MOVIE
STILL
SET
BACK
N
The frame size and rate for the time-lapse movie can be selected
using P TIME-LAPSE MOVIE MODE before shooting begins.
4
Use the focus stick to choose the
starting time and then press MENU/OK.
START WAITING TIME
ESTIMATED START TIME
11:00
PM
START CANCEL
LATER
hm
2
1
24
23
0
00

114
6
The Shooting Menus
5
Shooting will start automatically.
3/999
6h12m30s
CANCEL
O
Interval timer photography cannot be used at a shutter speed of
B (bulb) or HDR, e(4K), or during panorama or multiple exposure
photography. In burst mode, only one picture will be taken each time
the shutter is released.
N
Use of a tripod is recommended.
The display sometimes turns o between shots and lights a few sec-
onds before the next shot is taken. The display can be activated at any
time by pressing the shutter button.
P TIME-LAPSE MOVIE MODE
Choose the frame size and rate for time-lapse movies.
Option
Option
Frame size
Frame size
Rate
Rate
V 2160/30P
*
3840 × 2160 (4K)
30fps
V 2160/15P
*
15fps
i 1080/59.94P
1920 × 1080 (Full HD)
59.94fps
i 1080/50P 50fps
i 1080/24P 24fps
i 1080/23.98P 23.98fps
h 720/59.94P
1280 × 720 (HD)
59.94fps
h 720/50P 50fps
h 720/24P 24fps
h 720/23.98P 23.98fps
* Use a memory card with a UHS speed class of 3 or better when recording time-lapse
movies that will be viewed on the camera.

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6
The Shooting Menus
SHOOTING MENU
D WHITE BALANCE
For natural colors, choose a white balance option that matches
the light source (
P
92).
f COLOR
Adjust color density. Choose from 5 options between +2 and −2.
Options
Options
+2 +1 0 −1 −2
q SHARPNESS
Sharpen or soften outlines. Choose from 5 options between +2
and −2.
Options
Options
+2 +1 0 −1 −2
r HIGHLIGHT TONE
Adjust the appearance of highlights. Choose from 5 options be-
tween +2 and −2.
Options
Options
+2 +1 0 −1 −2

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6
The Shooting Menus
s SHADOW TONE
Adjust the appearance of shadows. Choose from 5 options be-
tween +2 and −2.
Options
Options
+2 +1 0 −1 −2
h NOISE REDUCTION
Reduce noise in pictures taken at high sensitivities. Choose from
5 options between +2 and −2.
Options
Options
+2 +1 0 −1 −2
K LONG EXPOSURE NR
Select ON to reduce mottling in long time-exposures.
Options
Options
ON OFF

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6
The Shooting Menus
SHOOTING MENU
S AE BKT SETTING
Adjust exposure bracketing settings (
P
75).
FRAMES/STEP SETTING
FRAMES/STEP SETTING
Choose the number of shots and exposure step width for expo-
sure bracketing.
Option
Option
Description
Description
FRAMES Choose the number of shots in the bracketing sequence.
STEP Choose the amount exposure changes with each shot.
1 FRAME/CONTINUOUS
1 FRAME/CONTINUOUS
Choose the operation performed by pressing the shutter button
during exposure bracketing.
Option
Option
Description
Description
1 FRAME One photo is taken each time the shutter button is pressed.
CONTINUOUS
Each time the shutter button is pressed, the camera takes the
number of shots chosen using FRAMES/STEP SETTING, in-
crementing exposure by the selected amount with each shot.
SEQUENCE SETTING
SEQUENCE SETTING
Choose the order in which the shots are taken.
Option
Option
Description
Description
0 → + → –
The fi rst shot is taken at current exposure settings and exposure
compensation is then modifi ed over the succeeding shots, pro-
ceeding in order from the highest to the lowest value.
0 → – → +
The fi rst shot is taken at current exposure settings and exposure
compensation is then modifi ed over the succeeding shots, pro-
ceeding in order from the lowest to the highest value.
– → 0 → + Shooting proceeds in order from the lowest to the highest value.
+ → 0 → – Shooting proceeds in order from the highest to the lowest value.

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6
The Shooting Menus
w CONTROL RING SETTING
Choose the function assigned to the control ring (
P
9).
Options
Options
DEFAULT WHITE BALANCE DIGITAL TELE-CONV.
ISO FILM SIMULATION OFF
K TOUCH SCREEN MODE
Choose whether touch controls can be used to select the focus
area or release the shutter (
P
16).
M TOUCH ZOOM
Choose whether touch controls can be used for digital zoom
(
P
20).
c MF ASSIST
Choose how focus is displayed in manual focus mode.
Option
Option
Description
Description
STANDARD Focus is displayed normally.
FOCUS PEAK HIGHLIGHT
The camera heightens high-contrast outlines. Choose
a color and peaking level.

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6
The Shooting Menus
SHOOTING MENU
C PHOTOMETRY
Choose how the camera meters exposure.
O
The selected option will only take e ect when F AF/MF SETTING>
FACE/EYE DETECTION SETTING is FACE OFF/EYE OFF.
Mode
Mode
Description
Description
o
MULTI
The camera instantly determines exposure based on an analysis
of composition, color, and brightness distribution. Recommend-
ed in most situations.
p
SPOT
The camera meters lighting conditions in an area at the center
of the frame equivalent to 2% of the total. Recommended with
backlit subjects and in other cases in which the background is
much brighter or darker than the main subject.
q
AVERAGE
Exposure is set to the average for the entire frame. Provides con-
sistent exposure across multiple shots with the same lighting,
and is particularly eff ective for landscapes and portraits of sub-
jects dressed in black or white.
v INTERLOCK SPOT AE & FOCUS AREA
Select ON to meter the current focus frame when SINGLE POINT
is selected for F AF/MF SETTING> AF MODE and SPOT is se-
lected for C PHOTOMETRY.
Options
Options
ON OFF

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6
The Shooting Menus
p FLASH SET-UP
Adjust ash settings.
FLASH MODE
FLASH MODE
Choose a ash mode (
P
91).
FLASH COMPENSATION
FLASH COMPENSATION
Adjust ash brightness. Choose from values between +2EV and
–2EV. Note that the desired results may not be achieved depend-
ing on shooting conditions and the distance to the subject.
Options
Options
+2 +1 ⁄ +1 ⁄ +1 +⁄ +⁄ ±0 −⁄ −⁄ −1 −1 ⁄ −1 ⁄ −2
RED EYE REMOVAL
RED EYE REMOVAL
Choose ON to remove red-eye e ects caused by the ash.
Options
Options
ON OFF
N
Red-eye reduction is performed only when a face is detected.
Red-eye removal is not available with RAW images.

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6
The Shooting Menus
SHOOTING MENU
W MOVIE SET-UP
Adjust movie-recording options.
MOVIE MODE
MOVIE MODE
Choose a frame size and rate for movie recording.
Option
Option
Frame size
Frame size
Rate
Rate
V 2160/15P
*
3840 × 2160 (4K) 15fps
i 1080/59.94P i 1080/24P
1920 × 1080 (Full HD)
59.94fps, 50fps,
24fps, 23.98fps
i 1080/50P i 1080/23.98P
h 720/59.94P h 720/24P
1280 × 720 (HD)
h 720/50P h 720/23.98P
* Use a memory card with a UHS speed class of 3 or better when recording time-lapse
movies that will be viewed on the camera.
HD HIGH SPEED VIDEO
HD HIGH SPEED VIDEO
Record high-frame-rate HD movies that play back in slow mo-
tion, giving you time to view fast-moving subjects or details too
eeting for the naked eye: a batter’s swing, darting insects, or
swiftly- owing waters.
Option
Option
Description
Description
1.6× a59.94P F100P
Record HD (1280 × 720) movies at 1.6×, 2×, 3.3×, or 4×
speed and a frame rate of 100 fps. The movies play back
at ⁄
, ½ , ⁄
, or ¼ speed, respectively.
2× a50P F100P
3.3× a29.97P F100P
4× a25P F100P
OFF High-speed recording off .
O
High-speed movies are recorded at a reduced frame size with no
sound. Focus, exposure, and white balance are xed at the values in
e ect at the start of recording. Movies shot under low light may be un-
derexposed due to the high recording speeds; we recommend shoot-
ing outdoors in daylight or in other brightly-lit locations. If desired,
high-speed movies can also be viewed in slow-motion on a computer.

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The Shooting Menus
MOVIE ISO
MOVIE ISO
Choose the sensitivity for movie recording from AUTO or from
settings between ISO400 and 6400.
N
This setting has no e ect on photographs.
FOCUS MODE
FOCUS MODE
Choose the focus mode for movie recording.
Option
Option
Description
Description
MANUAL FOCUS Focus manually.
CONTINUOUS AF The camera focuses using AF-C.
SINGLE AF The camera focuses using AF-S.
AF MODE
AF MODE
Choose how the camera selects the focus point for movie recording.
Option
Option
Description
Description
MULTI Automatic focus-point selection.
AREA The camera focuses on the subject in the selected focus area.
HDMI OUTPUT INFO DISPLAY
HDMI OUTPUT INFO DISPLAY
If ON is selected, HDMI devices to which the camera is connected
will mirror the information in the camera display.
Options
Options
ON OFF

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6
The Shooting Menus
SHOOTING MENU
4K MOVIE OUTPUT
4K MOVIE OUTPUT
Choose the destination for 4K movies shot while the camera is
connected to an HDMI recorder or other device that supports 4K.
Option
Option
Description
Description
b CARD
4K movies are recorded to a camera memory card and output to the
HDMI device in 4K.
HDMI
4K movies are output to the HDMI device in 4K. The camera does
not record 4K movies to a memory card.
HDMI REC CONTROL
HDMI REC CONTROL
Choose whether the camera sends movie start and stop signals
to the HDMI device when the shutter button is pressed to start
and stop movie recording.
Options
Options
ON OFF
MIC LEVEL ADJUSTMENT
MIC LEVEL ADJUSTMENT
Adjust the recording level for the built-in and external micro-
phones.
Options
Options
4321
MIC/REMOTE RELEASE
MIC/REMOTE RELEASE
Specify whether the device connected to the microphone/re-
mote release connector is a microphone or a remote release.
Options
Options
m MIC n REMOTE

124
6
The Shooting Menus
W DIGITAL IMAGE STABILIZER
Choose whether to enable digital image stabilization during
movie recording.
Options
Options
ON OFF
r WIRELESS COMMUNICATION
Connect to smartphones running the latest version of the
FUJIFILM Camera Remote app. The smartphone can then be
used to:
•
Control the camera and take pictures remotely
•
Receive pictures uploaded from the camera
•
Browse the pictures on the camera and download selected pic-
tures
•
Upload location data to the camera
•
Release the camera shutter
•
Update camera rmware
N
For downloads and other information, visit:
http://app.fujifilm-dsc.com/en/camera_remote/

125
6
The Shooting Menus
SHOOTING MENU
x SHUTTER TYPE
Choose the shutter type. Using the electronic shutter also lets
you mute the shutter sound.
Option
Option
Description
Description
t MECHANICAL SHUTTER Take pictures with the mechanical shutter.
s ELECTRONIC SHUTTER Take pictures with the electronic shutter.
t MECHANICAL+s ELECTRONIC The camera chooses the shutter type according
to shooting conditions.
O
When the electronic shutter is used, distortion may be visible in shots
of moving subjects and in hand-held shots taken at high shutter
speeds, while banding and fog may occur in shots taken under u-
orescent lights or other ickering or erratic illumination. When taking
pictures with the shutter muted, respect your subjects’ image rights
and right to privacy (
P
148).
N
When the electronic shutter is used, the ash is disabled, sensitivity is
restricted to values of ISO12800–200, and long exposure noise reduc-
tion has no e ect.
J DIGITAL TELE-CONV.
Take pictures at di erent focal lengths using the digital telecon-
verter (
P
68).
Options
Options
50mm 35mm OFF
N
All focal lengths are given using 35 mm format equivalents.

126
MEMO

127
Playback and the Playback
Menu

128
Playback and the Playback Menu
7
The Playback Display
This section lists the indicators that may be displayed
during playback.
O
For illustrative purposes, displays are shown with all indicators lit.
01/01/2018 10:00 AM
A
Date and time .........................................35, 146
B
Bluetooth ON/OFF ........................................156
C
Image transfer order ....................................133
D
Image transfer status...................................133
E
Number of frames selected for upload
.........................................................................133
F
Sound and fl ash indicator .........................147
G
Frame number ...............................................154
H
Protected image ............................................139
I
Location data........................................156, 158
J
Red-eye removal indicator .........................140
K
Advanced fi lter................................................. 65
L
Battery level ...................................................... 34
M
Image size/quality ...............................108, 109
N
Film simulation .............................................111
O
Dynamic range .............................................110
P
White balance ...............................................115
Q
Sensitivity ........................................................ 106
R
Exposure compensation ............................... 67
S
Aperture ................................................53, 56, 57
T
Shutter speed ......................................53, 54, 57
U
Playback mode indicator ............................. 42
V
Movie icon.........................................................48
W
Face detection indicator .............................104
X
Gift image .........................................................42
Y
Photobook assist indicator ........................141
Z
Rating ............................................................... 129
a
DPOF print indicator ....................................143

129
Playback and the Playback Menu
7
The Playback Display
The DISP/BACK Button
The DISP/BACK button controls the display
of indicators during playback.
Standard Information o
1/1 0 0 0
1/1000
+1.0
+1.0
12800
12800
5.6
5.6
01/01/2018 10:00 AM
01/01/2018 10:00 AM
FAVORITES
01/01/2018 10:00 AM
NEXT
Favorites Info display 1
1/1000
S.S
5.6
F
12800 +1.0
ISO
LENS
23.0
mm
F
5.6
FOCAL LENGTH
23.0
mm
COLOR SPACE sRGB
LENS MODULATION OPT.
ON
NEXT
Info display 2
Favorites: Rating Pictures
To rate the current picture, press DISP/BACK and press the focus stick (focus
lever) up and down to select from zero to ve stars.

130
Playback and the Playback Menu
7
The Playback Display
Zooming in on the Focus Point
Press the Fn2 (function 2) button to zoom in on the focus point. Press the
button again to return to full-frame playback.

131
Playback and the Playback Menu
7
Viewing Pictures
Read this section for information on playback zoom and
multi-frame playback.
Use the rear command dial to go from
full-frame playback to playback zoom or
multi-frame playback.
Full-frame playback
Multi-frame
playback
Playback
zoom
Nine-frame view
Hundred- frame view
DISP/BACK
MENU/OK
Medium zoom
Maximum zoom

132
Playback and the Playback Menu
7
Viewing Pictures
Playback Zoom
Rotate the rear command dial to zoom in or out on pictures in
full-frame playback. To exit zoom, press DISP/BACK, MENU/OK, or the
Fn2 (function 2) button.
N
The maximum zoom ratio varies with the option selected for
O IMAGE SIZE. Playback zoom is not available with cropped or re-
sized copies saved at a size of a.
Scroll
When the picture is zoomed in, the focus stick
(focus lever) can be used to view areas of the
image not currently visible in the display.
Navigation window
Multi-Frame Playback
To change the number of images displayed, rotate the rear com-
mand dial clockwise when a picture is displayed full frame.
N
Use the focus stick (focus lever) to highlight images and press
MENU/OK to view the highlighted image full frame. In the nine- and
hundred-frame displays, press the focus stick up or down to view
more pictures.

133
Playback and the Playback Menu
7
The Playback Menu (K/L/M)
Adjust playback settings.
The playback menu is displayed when
you press MENU/OK in playback mode.
Choose from tabs K, L, or M.
WIRELESS COMMUNICATION
PLAYBACK MENU
ERASE
CROP
RESIZE
PROTECT
EXIT
RAW CONVERSION
IMAGE TRANSFER ORDER
U IMAGE TRANSFER ORDER
Select photos for upload to a paired smartphone or tablet.
1
Select U IMAGE TRANSFER ORDER> SELECT FRAMES in
the playback menu.
2
Highlight photos and press MENU/OK to select or deselect. Re-
peat until all the desired photos have been selected.
3
Press DISP/BACK to exit to playback.
N
If ON is selected for r CONNECTION SETTING> Bluetooth
SETTINGS> Bluetooth ON/OFF, upload will begin shortly after
you exit to playback or turn the camera o .
N
Image transfer orders can contain a maximum of 999 pictures. Protect-
ed pictures, RAW images, “gift” pictures, and movies cannot be select-
ed for upload.
When WIRELESS COMMUNICATION is assigned to the Fn button
and PAIRING/TRANSFER ORDER is selected for r CONNECTION
SETTING> GENERAL SETTINGS> r BUTTON SETTING, the Fn but-
ton can be used to select pictures for upload. To deselect all images,
select RESET ORDER for IMAGE TRANSFER ORDER. To upload pic-
tures as they are taken, select ON for r CONNECTION SETTING>
Bluetooth SETTINGS> AUTO IMAGE TAGGING.

134
Playback and the Playback Menu
7
r WIRELESS COMMUNICATION
Connect to smartphones running the latest version of the
FUJIFILM Camera Remote app. The smartphone can then be
used to:
•
Control the camera and take pictures remotely
•
Receive pictures uploaded from the camera
•
Browse the pictures on the camera and download selected pic-
tures
•
Upload location data to the camera
•
Release the camera shutter
•
Update camera rmware
N
For downloads and other information, visit:
http://app.fujifilm-dsc.com/en/camera_remote/
j RAW CONVERSION
RAW pictures store information on camera settings separate-
ly from the data captured by the camera image sensor. Using
j RAW CONVERSION, you can create JPEG copies of RAW pic-
tures using di erent options for the settings listed on page 135.
The original image data are una ected, allowing a single RAW
image to be processed in a multitude of di erent ways.
1
With a RAW picture displayed, press MENU/OK to display the
playback menu.
2
Press the focus stick (focus lever)
up or down to highlight j RAW
CONVERSION in the playback menu
and press MENU/OK to display settings.
N
These options can also be displayed
by pressing the Q button during play-
back.
CREATE
REFLECT SHOOTING COND.
PUSH/PULL PROCESSING
DYNAMIC RANGE
FILM SIMULATION
WHITE BALANCE
WB SHIFT
RAW CONVERSION
CANCEL

135
Playback and the Playback Menu
7
The Playback Menu
3
Use the focus stick (focus lever) to highlight a setting.
4
Press the stick right to display op-
tions for the highlighted setting.
撮影時条件を反映
増感/減感
ダイナミックレンジ
フイルムシミュレーション
ホワイトバランス
WB
シフト
RAW CONVERSION
200
%
400
%
100
%
5
Use the stick to highlight the desired option.
6
Press MENU/OK to select the highlighted option. The settings
list shown in Step2 will be displayed. Repeat Steps2 to 6 to
adjust additional settings as desired.
7
Press the Q button to preview the JPEG copy and press
MENU/OK to save.
The settings that can be adjusted when converting pictures from
RAW to JPEG are:
Setting
Setting
Description
Description
REFLECT SHOOTING COND.
Create a JPEG copy using the settings in eff ect at the
time the photo was taken.
PUSH/PULL PROCESSING Adjust exposure.
DYNAMIC RANGE Enhance details in highlights for natural contrast.
FILM SIMULATION Simulate the eff ects of diff erent types of fi lm.
WHITE BALANCE Adjust white balance.
WB SHIFT Fine-tune white balance.
COLOR Adjust color density.
SHARPNESS Sharpen or soften outlines.
HIGHLIGHT TONE Adjust highlights.
SHADOW TONE Adjust shadows.
NOISE REDUCTION Process the copy to reduce mottling.
COLOR SPACE Choose the color space used for color reproduction.

136
Playback and the Playback Menu
7
A ERASE
Delete individual pictures, multiple selected pictures, or all pic-
tures.
O
Deleted pictures cannot be recovered. Protect important pictures or
copy them to a computer or other storage device before proceeding.
Option
Option
Description
Description
FRAME Delete pictures one at a time.
SELECTED FRAMES Delete multiple selected pictures.
ALL FRAMES Delete all unprotected pictures.
FRAME
1
Select FRAME for ERASE in the playback menu.
2
Press the focus stick (focus lever) left or right to scroll through
pictures and press MENU/OK to delete (a con rmation dialog is
not displayed). Repeat to delete additional pictures.

137
Playback and the Playback Menu
7
The Playback Menu
SELECTED FRAMES
1
Select SELECTED FRAMES for ERASE in the playback menu.
2
Highlight pictures and press MENU/OK to select or deselect
(pictures in photobooks or printer orders are shown by S).
Selected pictures are indicated by check marks (R).
3
When the operation is complete, press DISP/BACK to display a
con rmation dialog.
4
Highlight OK and press MENU/OK to delete the selected pic-
tures.
ALL FRAMES
1
Select ALL FRAMES for ERASE in the playback menu.
2
A con rmation dialog will be displayed; highlight OK and
press MENU/OK to delete all unprotected pictures.
N
Pressing DISP/BACK cancels deletion; note that any pictures deleted be-
fore the button was pressed cannot be recovered.
If a message appears stating that the selected images are part of a
DPOF print order, press MENU/OK to delete the pictures.

138
Playback and the Playback Menu
7
G CROP
Create a cropped copy of the current picture.
1
Display the desired picture.
2
Select G CROP in the playback menu.
3
Use the rear command dial and focus stick (focus lever) to
choose the crop.
4
Press MENU/OK to display a con rmation dialog.
5
Press MENU/OK again to save the cropped copy to a separate
le.
N
Larger crops produce larger copies; all copies have an aspect ratio of
3∶2. If the size of the nal copy will be a, YES will be displayed in
yellow.
O RESIZE
Create a small copy of the current picture.
1
Display the desired picture.
2
Select O RESIZE in the playback menu.
3
Highlight a size and press MENU/OK to display a con rmation
dialog.
4
Press MENU/OK again to save the resized copy to a separate
le.
N
The sizes available vary with the size of the original image.

139
Playback and the Playback Menu
7
The Playback Menu
D PROTECT
Protect pictures from accidental deletion. Highlight one of the
following options and press MENU/OK.
•
FRAME: Protect selected pictures. Press the focus stick (focus le-
ver) left or right to view pictures and press MENU/OK to select or
deselect. Press DISP/BACK when the operation is complete.
•
SET ALL: Protect all pictures.
•
RESET ALL: Remove protection from all pictures.
O
Protected pictures will be deleted when the memory card is formatted.
C IMAGE ROTATE
Rotate pictures.
1
Display the desired picture.
2
Select C IMAGE ROTATE in the playback menu.
3
Press the focus stick (focus lever) down to rotate the picture
90° clockwise, up to rotate it 90° counterclockwise.
4
Press MENU/OK. The picture will automatically be displayed in
the selected orientation whenever it is played back on the
camera.
N
Protected pictures cannot be rotated. Remove protection before rotat-
ing pictures.
The camera may not be able to rotate pictures created with other de-
vices. Pictures rotated on the camera will not be rotated when viewed
on a computer or on other cameras.
Pictures taken with A SCREEN SET-UP> AUTOROTATE PB are auto-
matically displayed in the correct orientation during playback.

140
Playback and the Playback Menu
7
B RED EYE REMOVAL
Remove red-eye from portraits. The camera will analyze the im-
age; if red-eye is detected, the image will be processed to create
a copy with reduced red-eye.
1
Display the desired picture.
2
Select B RED EYE REMOVAL in the playback menu.
3
Press MENU/OK.
N
Results vary depending on the scene and the camera’s success in de-
tecting faces. Red eye cannot be removed from pictures that have
already been processed using red-eye removal, which are indicated by
a e icon during playback.
The amount of time needed to process the image varies with the
number of faces detected.
Red eye removal cannot be performed on RAW images.
I SLIDE SHOW
View pictures in an automated slide show.
Press MENU/OK to start
and press the focus stick (focus lever) right or left to skip ahead
or back
. Press DISP/BACK at any time during the show to view on-
screen help. The show can be ended at any time by pressing
MENU/OK.
N
The camera will not turn o automatically while a slide show is in
progress.

141
Playback and the Playback Menu
7
The Playback Menu
m PHOTOBOOK ASSIST
Create books from your favorite photos.
Creating a Photobook
1
Select NEW BOOK for m PHOTOBOOK ASSIST in the play-
back menu.
2
Scroll through the images and press the focus stick (focus le-
ver) up to select or deselect. Press MENU/OK to exit when the
book is complete.
N
Neither photographs a or smaller nor movies can be selected
for photobooks.
The rst picture selected becomes the cover image. Press the fo-
cus stick down to select the current image for the cover instead.
3
Highlight COMPLETE PHOTOBOOK and press MENU/OK (to se-
lect all photos for the book, choose SELECT ALL). The new
book will be added to the list in the photobook assist menu.
N
Books can contain up to 300 pictures. Books that contain no photos
are automatically deleted.
Photobooks
Photobooks can be copied to a computer using MyFinePix Studio software.

142
Playback and the Playback Menu
7
Viewing Photobooks
Highlight a book in the photobook assist menu and press MENU/OK
to display the book, then press the focus stick (focus lever) left or
right to scroll through the pictures.
Editing and Deleting Photobooks
Display the photobook and press MENU/OK. The following options
will be displayed; select the desired option and follow the on-
screen instructions.
•
EDIT: Edit the book as described in “Creating a Photobook”.
•
ERASE: Delete the book.
s PC AUTO SAVE
Upload pictures from the camera to a computer running the
latest version of FUJIFILM PC AutoSave (note that you must rst
install the software and con gure the computer as a destination
for images copied from the camera).
N
For downloads and other information, visit:
http://app.fujifilm-dsc.com/en/pc_autosave/

143
Playback and the Playback Menu
7
The Playback Menu
K PRINT ORDER (DPOF)
Create a digital “print order” for DPOF-compatible printers.
1
Select K PRINT ORDER (DPOF) in the playback menu.
2
Select WITH DATE s to print the date of recording on pic-
tures, WITHOUT DATE to print pictures without dates, or
RESET ALL to remove all pictures from the print order before
proceeding.
3
Display a picture you wish to include in or remove from the
print order.
4
Press the focus stick (focus lever) up
or down to choose the number of
copies (up to 99). To remove a pic-
ture from the order, press the focus
stick down until the number of cop-
ies is 0.
01
PRINT ORDER
(
DPOF
)
SHEETS
SETFRAME
DPOF:
00001
Total number of prints
Number of copies
5
Repeat steps 3–4 to complete the print order.
6
The total number of prints is displayed in the monitor. Press
MENU/OK to exit.
N
The pictures in the current print order are indicated by a u icon
during playback.
Print orders can contain a maximum of 999 pictures.
If a memory card is inserted containing a print order created by an-
other camera, you will need to delete the order before creating as de-
scribed above.

144
Playback and the Playback Menu
7
The Playback Menu
V instax PRINTER PRINT
Print pictures on optional Fuji lm instax SHARE printers
(
P
182).
J DISP ASPECT
Choose how High De nition (HD) devices display pictures with
an aspect ratio of 3∶2 (this option is available only when an HDMI
cable is connected). Select 16∶9 to display the image so that it
lls the screen with its top and bottom cropped out, 3∶2 to dis-
play the entire image with black bands at either side.
3:2
16 : 9
Option
Option
16
16
∶
∶
9
9
3
3
∶
∶
2
2
Display

145
The Setup Menus

146
The Setup Menus
8
The Setup Menu (G/H/I)
Adjust basic camera settings.
To access basic camera settings, press
MENU/OK and select tab
G, H, or I.
ON
EXIT
SET-UP
DATE/TIME
TIME DIFFERENCE
RESET
SOUND & FLASH
SOUND SET-UP
SCREEN SET-UP
ENGLISH
F DATE/TIME
Set the camera clock (
P
37).
N TIME DIFFERENCE
Switch the camera clock instantly from your home time zone to
the local time at your destination when traveling. To specify the
di erence between your local and home time zone:
1
Highlight g LOCAL and press MENU/OK.
2
Use the focus stick (focus lever) to choose the time di erence
between local time and your home time zone. Press MENU/OK
when settings are complete.
To set the camera clock to local time, highlight g LOCAL and
press MENU/OK. To set the clock to the time in your home time zone,
select h HOME. If g LOCAL is selected, g will be displayed in
yellow for about three seconds when the camera is turned on.
Options
Options
g LOCAL h HOME
Q a
Choose a language (
P
37).

147
The Setup Menus
8
The Setup Menu
R RESET
Reset shooting or setup menu options to default values.
1
Highlight the desired option and press MENU/OK.
Option
Option
Description
Description
SHOOTING MENU RESET
Reset all shooting menu settings other than custom
white balance to default values.
SET-UP RESET
Reset all setup menu settings other than
F DATE/TIME, N TIME DIFFERENCE, and
r CONNECTION SETTING to default values.
2
A con rmation dialog will be displayed; highlight OK and
press MENU/OK.
o SOUND & FLASH
Select OFF to disable the speaker, ash, and illuminator in situa-
tions in which camera sounds or lights may be unwelcome.
Options
Options
ON OFF
N
o appears in the display when OFF is selected.

148
The Setup Menus
8
b SOUND SET-UP
Adjust sound settings.
OPERATION VOL.
OPERATION VOL.
Adjust the volume of the sounds produced when camera con-
trols are operated. Choose eOFF to disable control sounds.
Options
Options
b (high) c (medium) d (low) eOFF (mute)
SHUTTER VOLUME
SHUTTER VOLUME
Adjust the volume of the sounds produced by the electronic
shutter. Choose eOFF to disable the shutter sound.
Options
Options
b (high) c (medium) d (low) eOFF (mute)
SHUTTER SOUND
SHUTTER SOUND
Choose the sound made by the electronic shutter.
Options
Options
i SOUND 1 j SOUND 2 k SOUND 3
PLAYBACK VOLUME
PLAYBACK VOLUME
Adjust the volume for movie playback. Choose from 10 options
between 10 (high) and 1 (low) or select 0 to mute audio during
movie playback.
Options
Options
109876543210

149
The Setup Menus
8
The Setup Menu
A SCREEN SET-UP
Adjust display settings.
IMAGE DISP.
IMAGE DISP.
Choose how long images are displayed after shooting. Colors
may di er slightly from those in the nal image and “noise” mot-
tling may be visible at high sensitivities. Note that at some set-
tings, the camera will display pictures after shooting regardless
of the option selected.
Option
Option
Description
Description
CONTINUOUS
Pictures are displayed until the MENU/OK button is pressed or the
shutter button is pressed halfway. To zoom in on the active focus
point, press the Fn2 (function 2) button; press again to cancel
zoom.
1.5 SEC
Pictures are displayed for the selected time or until the shutter
button is pressed halfway.
0.5 SEC
OFF Pictures are not displayed after shooting.
PREVIEW EXP. IN MANUAL MODE
PREVIEW EXP. IN MANUAL MODE
Select ON to enable exposure preview in manual exposure mode.
Options
Options
ON OFF
N
Select OFF when using the ash or on other occasions on which ex-
posure may change when the picture is taken.
LCD BRIGHTNESS
LCD BRIGHTNESS
Adjust monitor brightness.
Options
Options
+5 +4 +3 +2 +1 0 −1 −2 −3 −4 −5
LCD COLOR
LCD COLOR
Adjust monitor hue.
Options
Options
+5 +4 +3 +2 +1 0 −1 −2 −3 −4 −5

150
The Setup Menus
8
PREVIEW PIC. EFFECT
PREVIEW PIC. EFFECT
Choose ON to preview the e ects of lm simulation, white bal-
ance, and other settings in the monitor, OFF to make shadows
in low-contrast, back-lit scenes and other hard-to-see subjects
more visible.
Options
Options
ON OFF
N
If OFF is selected, the e ects of camera settings will not be visible
in the monitor and colors and tone will di er from those in the nal
picture. The display will however be adjusted to show the e ects of
advanced lters and of monochrome and sepia settings.
FRAMING GUIDELINE
FRAMING GUIDELINE
Choose a framing grid for shooting mode.
Option
Option
F
F
GRID 9
GRID 9
G
G
GRID 24
GRID 24
H
H
HD FRAMING
HD FRAMING
Display
P P P
For “rule of thirds” compo-
sition.
A six-by-four grid. Frame HD pictures in the
crop shown by the lines at
the top and bottom of the
display.
N
Framing guides are not shown at default settings but can be displayed
using A SCREEN SET-UP> DISP. CUSTOM SETTING (
P
13).

151
The Setup Menus
8
The Setup Menu
AUTOROTATE PB
AUTOROTATE PB
Choose ON to automatically rotate “tall” (portrait-orientation)
pictures during playback.
Options
Options
ON OFF
FOCUS CHECK
FOCUS CHECK
If ON is selected, the display will automatically zoom in on the
selected focus area when the control ring is rotated in manual
focus mode.
Options
Options
ON OFF
N
Pressing the Fn2 (function 2) button cancels focus zoom.
FOCUS SCALE UNITS
FOCUS SCALE UNITS
Choose the units used for the focus distance indicator.
Options
Options
METERS FEET
DISP. CUSTOM SETTING
DISP. CUSTOM SETTING
Choose items for the standard display (
P
13).

152
The Setup Menus
8
h BUTTON SETTING
Choose the roles played by camera controls.
FUNCTION (Fn) SETTING
FUNCTION (Fn) SETTING
Choose the roles played by the function buttons (
P
167).
N
Role selection can also be accessed by pressing and holding the func-
tion or DISP/BACK button.
EDIT/SAVE QUICK MENU
EDIT/SAVE QUICK MENU
Choose the items displayed in the quick menu (
P
165).
N
The quick menu can also be accessed in shooting mode by holding
the Q button.
FOCUS LEVER SETTING
FOCUS LEVER SETTING
Choose the functions performed by the focus stick (focus lever).
Option
Option
Description
Description
LOCK (OFF) The focus stick cannot be used during shooting.
PUSH n TO UNLOCK
Press the stick to view the focus-point display and tilt the
stick to select a focus point.
ON
Tilt the stick to view the focus-point display and select a
focus point.
I FOCUS RING
Choose the direction in which the control ring is rotated to in-
crease the focus distance in manual focus mode.
Options
Options
X CW (clockwise) Y CCW (counterclockwise)

153
The Setup Menus
8
The Setup Menu
K TOUCH SCREEN SETTING
Enable or disable touch-screen controls.
Options
Options
ON OFF
Z POWER MANAGEMENT
Adjust power management settings.
AUTO POWER OFF
AUTO POWER OFF
Choose the length of time before the camera turns o automati-
cally when no operations are performed. Shorter times increase
battery life; if OFF is selected, the camera must be turned o
manually.
Options
Options
5 MIN 2 MIN OFF
HIGH PERFORMANCE
HIGH PERFORMANCE
Select ON for faster focus and to reduce the time needed to re-
start the camera after it has been turned o .
Options
Options
ON OFF

154
The Setup Menus
8
t SAVE DATA SET-UP
Adjust le management settings.
FRAME NO.
FRAME NO.
New pictures are stored in image les
named using a four-digit le number as-
signed by adding one to the last le num-
ber used. The le number is displayed
during playback as shown. FRAME NO.
controls whether le numbering is reset
to 0001 when a new memory card is in-
serted or the current memory card is for-
matted.
100-0001
100-0001
Directory number
File number
Frame number
Option
Option
Description
Description
CONTINUOUS
Numbering continues from the last fi le number used or the fi rst
available fi le number, whichever is higher. Choose this option to
reduce the number of pictures with duplicate fi le names.
RENEW
Numbering is reset to 0001 after formatting or when a new mem-
ory card is inserted.
N
If the frame number reaches 999-9999, the shutter release will be dis-
abled. Format the memory card after transferring to a computer any
pictures you wish to keep.
Selecting R RESET sets FRAME NO. to CONTINUOUS but does not
reset the le number.
Frame numbers for pictures taken with other cameras may di er.
SAVE ORG IMAGE
SAVE ORG IMAGE
Choose ON to save unprocessed copies of pictures taken using
p FLASH SET-UP> RED EYE REMOVAL.
Options
Options
ON OFF

155
The Setup Menus
8
The Setup Menu
EDIT FILE NAME
EDIT FILE NAME
Change the le name pre x. sRGB images use a four-letter pre x
(default “DSCF”), Adobe RGB images a three-letter pre x (“DSF”)
preceded by an underscore.
Option
Option
Default pre x
Default pre x
Sample le name
Sample le name
sRGB DSCF ABCD0001
AdobeRGB _DSF _ABC0001
DATE STAMP
DATE STAMP
Stamp the time and/or date of recording on photographs as they
are taken.
Option
Option
Description
Description
R+S Stamp new photographs with the date and time of recording.
R
Stamp new photographs with the date of recording.
OFF Do not stamp the time and date on new photographs.
O
Time and date stamps cannot be deleted. Turn DATE STAMP o to
prevent time and date stamps appearing on new photographs.
If the camera clock is not set, you will be prompted to set the clock to
the current date and time (
P
35, 37).
We recommend that you turn the DPOF “print date” option o when
printing images with a time and date stamp (
P
143).
Time and date stamps do not appear on movies or RAW images or on
shots taken using 4K burst or multi-focus.
J COLOR SPACE
Choose the gamut of colors available for color reproduction.
Option
Option
Description
Description
sRGB Recommended in most situations.
Adobe RGB For commercial printing.

156
The Setup Menus
8
r CONNECTION SETTING
Adjust settings for connection to wireless devices, including
smartphones, computers, and Fuji lm instax SHARE printers.
N
For more information on wireless connections, visit:
http://fujifilm-dsc.com/wifi/
Bluetooth SETTINGS
Bluetooth SETTINGS
Adjust Bluetooth settings.
Option
Option
Description
Description
PAIRING REGISTRATION
To pair the camera with a smartphone or tablet, select
this option, then launch FUJIFILM Camera Remote on the
smart device and tap PAIRING REGISTRATION.
SELECT PAIRING
DESTINATION
Choose a connection from a list of devices with which the
camera has been paired using PAIRING REGISTRATION.
Select NO CONNECTION to exit without connecting.
DELETE PAIRING REG.
Delete pairing information for selected devices. Choose
the device in the device list. The selected device will also
be removed from the devices listed in SELECT PAIRING
DESTINATION.
Bluetooth ON/OFF
•
ON: The camera automatically establishes a Bluetooth
connection with paired devices when turned on.
•
OFF: The camera does not connect via Bluetooth.
AUTO IMAGE TAGGING
•
ON: Mark JPEG images for upload as they are taken.
•
OFF: Photos are not marked for upload as they are taken.
SEAMLESS TRANSFER
•
ON: Pictures are uploaded to paired devices after shooting.
•
OFF: Pictures are uploaded to paired devices only when
the camera is off or starting shortly after you exit to play-
back.
SMARTPHONE SYNC.
SETTING
Choose whether to synchronize the camera to the time
and/or location provided by a paired smartphone.
•
LOCATION&TIME: Synchronize the time and location.
•
LOCATION: Synchronize the location.
•
TIME: Synchronize the time.
•
OFF: Synchronization off .

157
The Setup Menus
8
The Setup Menu
N
Install the latest version of the FUJIFILM Camera Remote app on your
smartphone or tablet before pairing the device with your camera or
uploading images.
When ON is selected for both Bluetooth ON/OFF and AUTO IMAGE
TAGGING and OFF is chosen for SEAMLESS TRANSFER, upload to
paired devices will begin when the camera is turned o or shortly after
you exit to playback.
If AUTO IMAGE TAGGING is o , pictures can be marked for transfer
using the U IMAGE TRANSFER ORDER option in the playback menu.
PC AUTO SAVE
PC AUTO SAVE
Adjust settings for connection to computers via wireless LAN.
Option
Option
Description
Description
PC AUTO SAVE SETTING
Choose the method used for connection to computers
via a wireless LAN.
•
SIMPLE SETUP: Connect using WPS.
•
MANUAL SETUP: Choose the network from a list
(SELECT FROM NETWORK LIST) or enter the name
manually (ENTER SSID).
DELETE REGISTERED
DESTINATION PC
Remove selected destinations.
DETAILS OF PREVIOUS
CONNECTION
View computers to which the camera has recently con-
nected.
instax PRINTER CONNECTION SETTING
instax PRINTER CONNECTION SETTING
Adjust settings for connection to optional Fuji lm instax SHARE
printers.
The Printer Name (SSID) and Password
The printer name (SSID) can be found on the
bottom of the printer; the default password is
“1111”. If you have already chosen a di erent
password to print from a smartphone, enter
that password instead.

158
The Setup Menus
8
GENERAL SETTINGS
GENERAL SETTINGS
Adjust settings for connection to wireless networks.
Option
Option
Description
Description
NAME
Choose a name (NAME) to identify the camera on the wire-
less network (the camera is assigned a unique name by de-
fault).
RESIZE IMAGE FOR
SMARTPHONE H
Choose ON (the default setting, recommended in most
circumstances) to resize larger images to H for upload to
smartphones, OFF to upload images at their original size.
Resizing applies only to the copy uploaded to the smart-
phone; the original is not aff ected.
GEOTAGGING
Choose whether location data downloaded from a smart-
phone are embedded in pictures as they are taken.
LOCATION INFO
Display the location data last downloaded from a smart-
phone.
r BUTTON SETTING
Choose the role played by the Fn button when it is assigned
the WIRELESS COMMUNICATION function.
•
PAIRING/TRANSFER ORDER: The Fn button can be
used for pairing and selecting images for transfer.
•
WIRELESS COMMUNICATION: The Fn button can be
used for wireless connections.
INFORMATION
INFORMATION
View the camera’s MAC and Bluetooth address.
RESET WIRELESS SETTING
RESET WIRELESS SETTING
Restore wireless settings to their default values.

159
The Setup Menus
8
The Setup Menu
K FORMAT
To format a memory card:
1
Highlight K FORMAT in the setup menu and press MENU/OK.
2
A con rmation dialog will be dis-
played. To format the memory card,
highlight OK and press MENU/OK. To
exit without formatting the memory
card, select CANCEL or press DISP/BACK.
SET
FORMAT
FORMAT OK?
ERASE ALL DATA
OK
CANCEL
O
All data—including protected pictures—will be deleted from the
memory card. Be sure important les have been copied to a computer
or other storage device.
Do not open the battery-chamber cover during formatting.

160
MEMO

161
Shortcuts

162
Shortcuts
9
Shortcut Options
Customize camera controls to suit your style or situation.
Frequently-used options can be added to the Q menu or assigned
to the Fn (function) button for direct access:
•
The Q menu (
P
163): The Q menu is displayed by pressing the Q
button. Use the Q menu to view or change the options selected
for frequently-used menu items.
•
The function buttons (
P
166): Use the function buttons for di-
rect access to selected features.

163
Shortcuts
9
The Q (Quick Menu) Button
Press Q for quick access to selected options.
The Quick Menu Display
At default settings, the quick menu contains the following items:
WHITE BALANCE
SET
3:2
F
400
P
A
SHOOTING MODE
B
ISO
C
DYNAMIC RANGE
D
WHITE BALANCE
E
NOISE REDUCTION
F
IMAGE SIZE
G
IMAGE QUALITY
H
FILM SIMULATION
I
HIGHLIGHT TONE
J
SHADOW TONE
K
COLOR
L
SHARPNESS
M
SELF-TIMER
N
AF MODE
O
FLASH MODE
P
LCD BRIGHTNESS

164
Shortcuts
9
Viewing and Changing Settings
1
Press Q to display the quick menu
during shooting.
2
Use the focus stick (focus lever) to
highlight items.
SET END
WHITE BALANCE
3
Rotate the rear or front command
dial to choose an option for the high-
lighted item.
4
Press Q to exit when settings are complete.
N
The shooting mode is the current shooting mode and cannot be
changed from the quick menu.
h CUSTOM and k COLOR TEMPERATURE white balance options
cannot be accessed using the Q button. Use a function button or the
shooting menu.

165
Shortcuts
9
The Q (Quick Menu) Button
Editing the Quick Menu
To choose the items displayed in the quick menu:
1
Press and hold the Q button during
shooting.
2
The current quick menu will be displayed; use the focus stick
(focus lever) to highlight the item you wish to change and
press MENU/OK.
3
Highlight any of the following options and press MENU/OK to
assign it to the selected position.
•
ISO
•
DYNAMIC RANGE
•
WHITE BALANCE
•
NOISE REDUCTION
•
IMAGE SIZE
•
IMAGE QUALITY
•
FILM SIMULATION
•
HIGHLIGHT TONE
•
SHADOW TONE
•
COLOR
•
SHARPNESS
•
SELF-TIMER
•
FACE/EYE DETECTION SETTING
•
PHOTOMETRY
•
AF MODE
•
FOCUS MODE
•
FLASH MODE
•
FLASH COMPENSATION
•
MF ASSIST
•
MOVIE MODE
•
MOVIE ISO
•
MIC LEVEL ADJUSTMENT
•
SOUND & FLASH
•
LCD BRIGHTNESS
•
LCD COLOR
•
SHUTTER TYPE
•
NONE
N
Select NONE to assign no option to the selected position.
N
The quick menu can also be edited using the h BUTTON SETTING>
EDIT/SAVE QUICK MENU option in the setup menu.

166
Shortcuts
9
The Fn (Function) Buttons
Assign a role to the function buttons for quick access to the
selected feature.
N
The functions assigned to T-Fn1 through T-Fn4 can be accessed by ick-
ing the monitor.
The default assignments are:
Fn1 (function 1) button
Fn1 (function 1) button
Auto image tagging
T-Fn1 ( ick up)
T-Fn1 ( ick up)
Snapshot
T-Fn3 ( ick right)
T-Fn3 ( ick right)
Face/eye detection setting
Fn2 (function 2) button
Fn2 (function 2) button
Focus check
T-Fn2 ( ick left)
T-Fn2 ( ick left)
Square mode(1:1)
T-Fn4 ( ick down)
T-Fn4 ( ick down)
Control ring setting

167
Shortcuts
9
The Fn (Function) Buttons
Assigning a Role to the Function Buttons
The roles assigned to the Fn (Function) button and touch
function gestures can be selected using h BUTTON SETTING>
FUNCTION (Fn) SETTING.
•
PREVIEW DEPTH OF FIELD
•
ISO
•
SELF-TIMER
•
IMAGE SIZE
•
SQUARE MODE(1:1)
•
IMAGE QUALITY
•
DYNAMIC RANGE
•
FILM SIMULATION
•
WHITE BALANCE
•
PHOTOMETRY
•
TOUCHZOOM
•
AE BKT SETTING
•
AE-LOCK
•
AF-LOCK
•
AE/AF LOCK
•
INSTANT AF
•
AF MODE
•
FOCUS MODE
•
SNAPSHOT
•
FOCUS AREA
•
FOCUS CHECK
•
RELEASE TYPE
•
FLASH MODE
•
FLASH COMPENSATION
•
MOVIE MODE
•
FACE/EYE DETECTION SETTING
•
RAW
•
WIRELESS COMMUNICATION
•
AUTO IMAGE TAGGING
•
SELECT PAIRING DESTINATION
•
Bluetooth ON/OFF
•
SHUTTER TYPE
•
PREVIEW EXP. IN MANUAL MODE
•
PREVIEW PIC. EFFECT
•
CONTROL RING SETTING
•
NONE
N
To disable the Fn button, choose NONE.
AE-LOCK, AF-LOCK, AE/AF LOCK, and INSTANT AF cannot be as-
signed touch function gestures (T-Fn1 through T-Fn4).
Role selection can also be accessed by pressing and holding the func-
tion or DISP/BACK button.

168
MEMO

169
Peripherals and Optional
Accessories

170
Peripherals and Optional Accessories
10
Accessories from Fuji lm
The following optional accessories are available from
Fuji lm. For the latest information on the accessories avail-
able in your region, check with your local Fuji lm repre-
sentative or visit http://www.fujifilm.com/products/digital_
cameras/index.html.
Rechargeable Li-ion batteries
Rechargeable Li-ion batteries
NP-95: Additional large-capacity NP-95 rechargeable batteries can
be purchased as required.
Battery chargers
Battery chargers
BC-65N: At +20°C/+68°F, the BC-65N charges an NP-95 in about
250minutes.
Remote releases
Remote releases
RR-90: Use to reduce camera shake or keep the shutter open
during a time exposure.
instax SHARE printers
instax SHARE printers
SP-1/SP-2/SP-3: Connect via wireless LAN to print pictures on instax fi lm.

171
Peripherals and Optional Accessories
10
Accessories from Fuji lm
Using a Remote Release
An optional RR-90 remote release can be used
for long time-exposures. The RR-90 connects
via the Micro USB (Micro-B) USB 2.0 connector.
Alternatively, electronic releases from third-par-
ty suppliers can be connected via the remote
release connector (⌀2.5mm 3-pole mini jack).
N
A con rmation dialog will be displayed
when a third-party release is connect-
ed; press MENU/OK and select REMOTE
for W MOVIE SET-UP> MIC/REMOTE
RELEASE.
CHECK MIC/REMOTE RELEASE
SETTING
SKIP
SET
Using an External Microphone
Sound can be recorded with external micro-
phones that connect using jacks 2.5mm in di-
ameter; microphones that require plug-in pow-
er cannot be used. See the microphone manual
for details.

172
MEMO

173
Connections

174
Connections
11
HDMI Output
Camera shooting and playback displays can be output to
HDMI devices.
Connecting to HDMI Devices
Connect the camera to TVs or other HDMI devices using a
third-party HDMI cable.
1
Turn the camera o .
2
Connect the cable as shown below, making sure the connec-
tors are fully inserted.
Insert into HDMI Micro connector
(Type D)
Insert into HDMI connector
O
Use an HDMI cable no more than 1.5m (4.9ft.) long.
3
Con gure the device for HDMI input as described in the doc-
umentation supplied with the device.
4
Turn the camera on. The contents of the camera display will
be shown on the HDMI device.
O
The USB cable cannot be used while an HDMI cable is connected.

175
Connections
11
HDMI Output
Shooting
Shoot photos and record movies while viewing the scene through
the camera lens on or saving footage to the HDMI device.
N
This feature can be used to save 4K and Full HD movies to an HDMI
recorder.
Playback
To start playback, press the camera a button. The camera mon-
itor turns o and pictures and movies are output to the HDMI
device. Note that the camera volume controls have no e ect on
sounds played on the TV; use the television volume controls to
adjust the volume.
O
Some televisions may brie y display a black screen when movie play-
back begins.

176
Connections
11
Wireless Connections (Bluetooth, Wireless
LAN/Wi-Fi)
Access wireless networks and connect to computers,
smartphones, or tablets. For more information, visit:
http://fujifilm-dsc.com/wifi/
Smart Phones and Tablets: FUJIFILM Camera Remote
Connect to the camera via Bluetooth or wireless LAN.
N
To establish a wireless connection to the camera, you will need to in-
stall the latest version of the FUJIFILM Camera Remote app on your
smartphone or tablet.
FUJIFILM Camera Remote
Once a connection has been established, you can use FUJFILM Camera
Remote to:
•
Control the camera and take pictures remotely
•
Receive pictures uploaded from the camera
•
Browse the pictures on the camera and download selected pictures
•
Upload location data to the camera
•
Release the camera shutter
•
Update camera rmware
For downloads and other information, visit:
http://app.fujifilm-dsc.com/en/camera_remote/

177
Connections
11
Wireless Connections (Bluetooth, Wireless LAN/Wi-Fi)
Smart Phones and Tablets: Bluetooth® Pairing
Use
r
CONNECTION SETTING> Bluetooth SETTINGS> PAIRING
REGISTRATION to pair the camera with smartphones or tablets.
Pairing o ers a simple method for downloading photos from the
camera.
N
Photos are downloaded via a wireless connection.
Once pairing is complete, you will be able to synchronize the camera
clock and location data with the smartphone or tablet (
P
156).
Smartphones and Tablets: Wi-Fi
Use the r WIRELESS COMMUNICATION options in the shoot-
ing menu or the playback menu to connect to a smartphone or
tablet via Wi-Fi.

178
Connections
11
Wireless Connections (Bluetooth, Wireless LAN/Wi-Fi)
Computers: FUJIFILM PC AutoSave
Install the latest version of FUJIFILM PC AutoSave to your com-
puter to upload pictures from the camera over wireless networks.
For downloads and other information, visit:
http://app.fujifilm-dsc.com/en/pc_autosave/
Computers: Wireless Connections
You can upload pictures from the camera using the s PC AUTO
SAVE option in the playback menu.
N
You can also upload pictures by pressing and holding the Fn1 (func-
tion1) button in playback mode.

179
Connections
11
Connecting to Computers via USB
Connect the camera to a computer to download pictures.
Windows (MyFinePix Studio)
Use MyFinePix Studio to copy pictures to your computer, where
they can be stored, viewed, organized, and printed. MyFinePix
Studio is available for download from the following website:
http://fujifilm-dsc.com/mfs/
Once download is complete, double-click the downloaded le
(“MFPS_Setup.EXE”) and follow the on-screen instructions to
complete installation.
Mac OS X/macOS
Pictures can be copied to your computer using Image Capture
(supplied with your computer) or other software.
RAW FILE CONVERTER EX
To view RAW les on your computer, use RAW FILE CONVERTER EX,
available for download from:
http://fujifilm-dsc.com/rfc/

180
Connections
11
Connecting the Camera
Connect the camera and computer using the supplied USB cable.
1
Find a memory card containing pictures you want to copy to
the computer and insert the card into the camera.
O
Loss of power during transfer could result in loss of data or dam-
age to the memory card. Insert a fresh or fully-charged battery
before connecting the camera.
2
Turn the camera o and connect the supplied USB cable as
shown, making sure the connectors are fully inserted.
O
The camera is equipped with a Micro USB (Micro-B) USB 2.0 con-
nector.
3
Turn the camera on.
4
Copy pictures to the computer using MyFinePix Studio or ap-
plications provided with your operating system.
5
When transfer is complete, turn the camera o and discon-
nect the USB cable.

181
Connections
11
Connecting to Computers via USB
O
If a memory card containing a large number of images is inserted,
there may be a delay before the software starts and you may be un-
able to import or save images. Use a memory card reader to transfer
pictures.
Connect the camera directly to the computer; do not use a USB hub
or keyboard.
Do not disconnect the USB cable while data are being exchanged be-
tween the camera and computer or insert or remove memory cards
while transfer is in progress. Failure to observe this precaution could
result in loss of data or damage to the memory card.
In some cases, it may not be possible to access pictures saved to a
network server using the software in the same way as on a standalone
computer.
The user bears all applicable fees charged by the phone company or
Internet service provider when using services that require an Internet
connection.

182
Connections
11
instax SHARE Printers
Print pictures from your digital camera to instax SHARE
printers.
Establishing a Connection
Select
r
CONNECTION SETTING> instax PRINTER CONNECTION
SETTING in the camera setup menu and enter the instax SHARE
printer name (SSID) and password.
The Printer Name (SSID) and Password
The printer name (SSID) can be found on the
bottom of the printer; the default password is
“1111”. If you have already chosen a di erent
password to print from a smartphone, enter
that password instead.

183
Connections
11
instax SHARE Printers
Printing Pictures
1
Turn the printer on.
2
Select V instax PRINTER PRINT in
the camera playback menu. The cam-
era will connect to the printer.
FUJIFILM-CAMERA-1234
CANCEL
CONNECTING TO PRINTER
PRINTER PRINT
instax-12345678
3
Use the focus stick (focus lever) to
display the picture you want to print,
then press MENU/OK.
100-0020
TRANSMIT CANCEL
instax-12345678
PRINTER PRINT
N
Pictures taken with other cameras cannot be printed.
The area printed is smaller than the area visible in the LCD monitor.
The displays may vary depending on the type of printer connected.
4
The picture will be sent to the printer and printing will start.

184
MEMO

185
Technical Notes

186
Technical Notes
12
Software from Fuji lm
The camera can be used with the following Fuji lm soft-
ware.
FUJIFILM Camera Remote
Establish a wireless connection between your camera and a
smartphone or tablet (
P
176).
http://app.fujifilm-dsc.com/en/camera_remote/
FUJIFILM PC AutoSave
Download pictures from your camera over wireless networks
(
P
178).
http://app.fujifilm-dsc.com/en/pc_autosave/
MyFinePix Studio
Manage, view, print, and edit the many images downloaded
from your digital camera (
P
179).
http://fujifilm-dsc.com/mfs/
RAW FILE CONVERTER EX
View RAW pictures on your computer and convert them into oth-
er formats (
P
179).
http://fujifilm-dsc.com/rfc/

187
Technical Notes
12
For Your Safety
IMPORTANT SAFETY INSTRUCTIONS
•
Read Instructions
Read Instructions: All the safety and operating instructions
should be read before the appliance is operated.
•
Retain Instructions
Retain Instructions: The safety and operating instructions
should be retained for future reference.
•
Heed Warnings
Heed Warnings: All warnings on the appliance and in the
operating instructions should be adhered to.
•
Follow Instructions
Follow Instructions: All operating and use instructions
should be followed.
Installation
Installation
Power Sources: This video product should be operated only
from the type of power source indicated on the marking la-
bel. If you are not sure of the type of power supply to your
home, consult your appliance dealer or local power com-
pany. For video products intended to operate from battery
power, or other sources, refer to the operating instructions.
Grounding or Polarization: This video product is equipped
with a polarized alternating-current line plug (a plug having
one blade wider than the other). This plug will fi t into the
power outlet only one way. This is a safety feature. If you are
unable to insert the plug fully into the outlet, try reversing
the plug. If the plug should still fail to fi t, contact your electri-
cian to replace your obsolete outlet. Do not defeat the safety
purpose of the polarized plug.
Alternate Warnings: This video product is equipped with
a three-wire grounding-type plug, a plug having a third
(grounding) pin. This plug will only fi t into a grounding-type
power outlet. This is a safety feature. If you are unable to
insert the plug into the outlet, contact your electrician to re-
place your obsolete outlet. Do not defeat the safety purpose
of the grounding type plug.
Overloading: Do not overload wall outlets and extension
cords as this can result in a risk of fi re or electric shock.
Ventilation: Slots and openings in the cabinet are provided
for ventilation, to ensure reliable operation of the video prod-
uct and to protect it from overheating, and these openings
must not be blocked or covered. The openings should never
be blocked by placing the video product on a bed, sofa, rug,
or other similar surface.
This video product should not be placed in a built-in instal-
lation such as a bookcase or rack unless proper ventilation is
provided or the manufacturer’s instructions have been ad-
hered to. This video product should never be placed near or
over a radiator or heat register.
Attachments: Do not use attachments not recommended by
the video product manufacturer as they may cause hazards.
Water and Moisture: Do not use this video product near wa-
ter—for example, near a bath tub, wash bowl, kitchen sink,
or laundry tub, in a wet basement, or near a swimming pool,
and the like.
Power-Cord Protection: Power-supply cords should be routed
so that they are not likely to be walked on or pinched by
items placed upon or against them, paying particular atten-
tion to cords at plugs, convenience receptacles, and the point
where they exit from the appliance.
Accessories: Do not place this video product on an unstable
cart, stand, tripod, bracket, or table. The video product may
fall, causing serious injury to a child or adult, and serious
damage to the appliance. Use only with a cart, stand, tripod,
bracket, or table recommended by the manufacturer, or sold
with the video product. Any mounting of the appliance
should follow the manufacturer’s instructions, and should use
a mounting accessory recommended by the manufacturer.
An appliance and cart combination
should be moved with care. Quick
stops, excessive force, and uneven
surfaces may cause the appliance and
cart combination to overturn.
Antennas
Antennas
Outdoor Antenna Grounding: If an outside antenna or cable
system is connected to the video product, be sure the an-
tenna or cable system is grounded so as to provide some
protection against voltage surges and built-up static charges.
Section 810 of the National Electrical Code, ANSI/NFPA No.
70, provides information with respect to proper grounding of
the mast and supporting structure, grounding of the lead-in
wire to an antenna discharge unit, size of grounding con-
ductors, location of antenna discharge unit, connection to
grounding electrodes, and requirements for the grounding
electrode.
EXAMPLE OF ANTENNA GROUNDING AS PER NATIONAL
ELECTRICAL CODE
Ground Clamp
t
Electric Service Equipment
e Equipment
A
A
ntenn
a
Le
ad
in
W
ir
e
A
A
Antenna
An
Discharge Unit
D
(NEC SECTION
N
810-20)
8
Ground Clamps
Power Service Grounding Electrode
System (NEC ART 250. PART H)
Groun
d
in
g
Con
d
uctors
(
NE
C
SECTION 810-21
)

188
Technical Notes
12
Power Lines: An outside antenna system should not be locat-
ed in the vicinity of overhead power lines or other electric
light or power circuits, or where it can fall into such power
lines or circuits. When installing an outside antenna system,
extreme care should be taken to keep from touching such
power lines or circuits as contact with them might be fatal.
Use
Use
Cleaning: Unplug this video product from the wall outlet be-
fore cleaning. Do not use liquid cleaners or aerosol cleaners.
Use a damp cloth for cleaning.
Object and Liquid Entry: Never push objects of any kind into
this video product through openings as they may touch dan-
gerous voltage points or short out parts that could result in
a fi re or electric shock. Never spill liquid of any kind on the
video product.
Lightning: For added protection for this video product re-
ceiver during a lightning storm, or when it is left unattended
and unused for long periods of time, unplug it from the wall
outlet and disconnect the antenna or cable system. This will
prevent damage to the video product due to lightning and
power-line surges.
Service
Service
Servicing: Do not attempt to service this video product
yourself as opening or removing covers may expose you to
dangerous voltage or other hazards. Refer all servicing to
qualifi ed service personnel.
Damage Requiring Service: Unplug this video product from
the wall outlet and refer servicing to qualifi ed service person-
nel under the following conditions:
•
When the power-supply cord or plug is damaged
•
If liquid has been spilled, or objects have fallen into the
video product.
•
If the video product has been exposed to rain or water.
•
If the video product has been dropped or the cabinet has
been damaged.
If the video product does not operate normally follow the
operating instructions. Adjust only those controls that are
covered by the operating instructions as an improper adjust-
ment of other controls may result in damage and will often
require extensive work by a qualifi ed technician to restore
the video product to its normal operation.
When the video product exhibits a distinct change in perfor-
mance — this indicates a need for service.
Replacement Parts: When replacement parts are required, be
sure the service technician has used replacement parts spec-
ifi ed by the manufacturer or have the same characteristics as
the original part. Unauthorized substitutions may result in
fi re, electric shock or other hazards.
Safety Check: Upon completion of any service or repairs to
this video product, ask the service technician to perform
safety checks to determine that the video product is in prop-
er operating condition.
Be sure to read these notes before use
Safety Notes
•
Make sure that you use your camera correctly. Read these
safety notes and your Owner’s Manual carefully before use.
•
After reading these safety notes, store them in a safe place.
About the Icons
The icons shown below are used in this document to indicate
the severity of the injury or damage that can result if the in-
formation indicated by the icon is ignored and the product is
used incorrectly as a result.
WARNING
WARNING
This icon indicates that death or serious in-
jury can result if the information is ignored.
CAUTION
CAUTION
This icon indicates that personal injury or
material damage can result if the informa-
tion is ignored.
The icons shown below are used to indicate the nature of the
instructions which are to be observed.
Triangular icons tell you that this information re-
quires attention (“Important”).
Circular icons with a diagonal bar tell you that the
action indicated is prohibited (“Prohibited”).
Filled circles with an exclamation mark indicate an
action that must be performed (“Required”).
The symbols on the product (including the accesories) rep-
resent the following:
AC
DC
Class II equipment (The construction of the product
is double-insulated.)
WARNING
WARNING
Unplug
from power
socket
If a problem arises, turn the camera o , remove the bat-
If a problem arises, turn the camera o , remove the bat-
tery, and disconnect and unplug the AC power adapter.
tery, and disconnect and unplug the AC power adapter.
Continued use of the camera when it is emitting
smoke, is emitting any unusual odor, or is in any
other abnormal state can cause a fi re or electric
shock. Contact your Fujifi lm dealer.
Do not allow water or foreign objects to enter the cam-
Do not allow water or foreign objects to enter the cam-
era.
era. If water or foreign objects get inside the cam-
era, turn the camera off , remove the battery, and
disconnect and unplug the AC power adapter. Con-
tinued use of the camera can cause a fi re or electric
shock. Contact your Fujifi lm dealer.
Do not use in
the bathroom
or shower
Do not use the camera in the bathroom or shower.
Do not use the camera in the bathroom or shower. This
can cause a fi re or electric shock.

189
Technical Notes
12
For Your Safety
WARNING
WARNING
Do not
disassemble
Never attempt to change or take apart the camera (never
Never attempt to change or take apart the camera (never
open the case).
open the case). Failure to observe this precaution can
cause fi re or electric shock.
Do not touch
internal
parts
Should the case break open as the result of a fall or other
Should the case break open as the result of a fall or other
accident, do not touch the exposed parts.
accident, do not touch the exposed parts. Failure to ob-
serve this precaution could result in electric shock or
in injury from touching the damaged parts. Remove
the battery immediately, taking care to avoid injury
or electric shock, and take the product to the point
of purchase for consultation.
Do not change, heat or unduly twist or pull the connec-
Do not change, heat or unduly twist or pull the connec-
tion cord and do not place heavy objects on the connec-
tion cord and do not place heavy objects on the connec-
tion cord.
tion cord. These actions could damage the cord and
cause a fi re or electric shock. If the cord is damaged,
contact your Fujifi lm dealer.
Do not place the camera on an unstable surface.
Do not place the camera on an unstable surface. This
can cause the camera to fall or tip over and cause
injury.
Never attempt to take pictures while in motion.
Never attempt to take pictures while in motion. Do not
use the camera while walking or driving. This can
result in you falling down or being involved in a
traffi c accident.
Do not touch any metal parts of the camera during a
Do not touch any metal parts of the camera during a
thunderstorm.
thunderstorm. This can cause an electric shock due
to induced current from the lightning discharge.
Do not use the battery except as speci ed.
Do not use the battery except as speci ed. Load the
battery as shown by the indicator.
Do not disassemble, modify, or heat batteries. Do not
Do not disassemble, modify, or heat batteries. Do not
drop, strike, or throw batteries or otherwise subject
drop, strike, or throw batteries or otherwise subject
them to strong impacts. Do not use batteries that show
them to strong impacts. Do not use batteries that show
signs of leaking, deformation, discoloration, or other
signs of leaking, deformation, discoloration, or other
abnormalities. Use only designated chargers to recharge
abnormalities. Use only designated chargers to recharge
rechargeable batteries and do not attempt to recharge
rechargeable batteries and do not attempt to recharge
non-rechargeable Li-ion or alkaline batteries. Do not
non-rechargeable Li-ion or alkaline batteries. Do not
short batteries or store them with metallic objects.
short batteries or store them with metallic objects. Fail-
ure to observe these precautions could result in the
batteries overheating, igniting, rupturing, or leaking,
causing fi re, burns, or other injury.
Use only batteries or AC power adapters speci ed for
Use only batteries or AC power adapters speci ed for
use with this camera. Do not use voltages other than the
use with this camera. Do not use voltages other than the
power supply voltage shown.
power supply voltage shown. The use of other power
sources can cause a fi re.
If the battery leaks and uid gets in contact with your
If the battery leaks and uid gets in contact with your
eyes, skin or clothing, ush the a ected area with clean
eyes, skin or clothing, ush the a ected area with clean
water and seek medical attention or call an emergency
water and seek medical attention or call an emergency
number right away.
number right away.
Do not use the charger to charge batteries other than
Do not use the charger to charge batteries other than
those speci ed here.
those speci ed here. The supplied charger is for use
only with batteries of the type supplied with the
camera. Using the charger to charge conventional
batteries or other types of rechargeable batteries
can cause the battery to leak, overheat or burst.
WARNING
WARNING
Using a ash too close to a person’s eyes may cause visual
Using a ash too close to a person’s eyes may cause visual
impairment.
impairment. Take particular care when photograph-
ing infants and young children.
Do not remain in prolonged contact with hot surfaces.
Do not remain in prolonged contact with hot surfaces.
Failure to observe this precaution could result in
low-temperature burns, particularly at high ambient
temperatures or with users who suff er from poor
circulation or reduced sensation, in which case use
of a tripod or similar precautions are recommended.
Do not leave one part of the body in contact with the
Do not leave one part of the body in contact with the
product for prolonged periods while the product is on.
product for prolonged periods while the product is on.
Failure to observe this precaution could result in
low-temperature burns, particularly during pro-
longed use, at high ambient temperatures, or with
users who suff er from poor circulation or reduced
sensation, in which case use of a tripod or similar
precautions are recommended.
Do not use in the presence of ammable objects, explo-
Do not use in the presence of ammable objects, explo-
sive gases, or dust.
sive gases, or dust.
When carrying the battery, install it in a digital camera
When carrying the battery, install it in a digital camera
or keep it in the hard case. When storing the battery,
or keep it in the hard case. When storing the battery,
keep it in the hard case. When discarding, cover the
keep it in the hard case. When discarding, cover the
battery terminals with insulation tape.
battery terminals with insulation tape. Contact with
other metallic objects or batteries could cause the
battery to ignite or burst.
Keep memory cards, hot shoes, and other small parts out
Keep memory cards, hot shoes, and other small parts out
of the reach of small children.
of the reach of small children. Children may swallow
small parts; keep out of reach of children. Should
a child swallow a small part, seek medical attention
or call emergency.
Keep out of reach of small children.
Keep out of reach of small children. Among the ele-
ments that could cause injury are the strap, which
could become entangled about a child’s neck, caus-
ing strangulation, and the fl ash, which could cause
visual impairment.
Follow the directions of airline and hospital personnel.
Follow the directions of airline and hospital personnel.
This product generates radio-frequency emissions
that could interfere with navigational or medical
equipment.
CAUTION
CAUTION
Do not use this camera in locations a ected by oil fumes,
Do not use this camera in locations a ected by oil fumes,
steam, humidity or dust.
steam, humidity or dust. This can cause a fi re or elec-
tric shock.
Do not leave this camera in places subject to extremely
Do not leave this camera in places subject to extremely
high temperatures.
high temperatures. Do not leave the camera in loca-
tions such as a sealed vehicle or in direct sunlight.
This can cause a fi re.
Do not place heavy objects on the camera.
Do not place heavy objects on the camera. This can cause
the heavy object to tip over or fall and cause injury.
Do not move the camera while the AC power adapter is still
Do not move the camera while the AC power adapter is still
connected.
connected. Do not pull on the connection cord to dis-
connect the AC power adapter. This can damage the
power cord or cables and cause a fi re or electric shock.

190
Technical Notes
12
CAUTION
CAUTION
Do not cover or wrap the camera or the AC power adapter
Do not cover or wrap the camera or the AC power adapter
in a cloth or blanket.
in a cloth or blanket. This can cause heat to build up
and distort the casing or cause a fi re.
Do not use the plug if it is damaged or if it does not t
Do not use the plug if it is damaged or if it does not t
securely into the outlet.
securely into the outlet. Failure to observe this precau-
tion could result in fi re or electric shock.
When you are cleaning the camera or you do not plan to
When you are cleaning the camera or you do not plan to
use the camera for an extended period, remove the bat-
use the camera for an extended period, remove the bat-
tery and disconnect and unplug the AC power adapter.
tery and disconnect and unplug the AC power adapter.
Failure to do so can cause a fi re or electric shock.
When charging ends, unplug the charger from the power
When charging ends, unplug the charger from the power
socket.
socket. Leaving the charger plugged into the power
socket can cause a fi re.
CAUTION
CAUTION
When a memory card is removed, the card could come
When a memory card is removed, the card could come
out of the slot too quickly. Use your nger to hold it and
out of the slot too quickly. Use your nger to hold it and
gently release the card.
gently release the card. Injury could result to those
struck by the ejected card.
Request regular internal testing and cleaning for your
Request regular internal testing and cleaning for your
camera.
camera. Build-up of dust in your camera can cause
a fi re or electric shock. Contact your Fujifi lm dealer
to request internal cleaning every two years. Please
note that this service is not free of charge.
Danger of explosion if battery is incorrectly replaced.
Danger of explosion if battery is incorrectly replaced.
Replace only with the same or equivalent type.
Replace only with the same or equivalent type.
The Battery and Power Supply
Note: Check the type of battery used in your camera and read
the appropriate sections.
WARNING: Battery shall not be exposed to excessive heat
such as sunshine, fire or the like.
The following describes the proper use of batteries and how
to prolong their life. Incorrect use can shorten battery life or
cause leakage, overheating, fi re, or explosion.
Li-ion Batteries
Li-ion Batteries
Read this section if your camera uses a rechargeable Li-ion
battery.
The battery is not charged at shipment. Charge the battery
before use. Keep the battery in its case when not in use.
■
■
Notes on the Battery
Notes on the Battery
The battery gradually loses its charge when not in use.
Charge the battery one or two days before use.
Battery life can be extended by turning the camera off when
not in use.
Battery capacity decreases at low temperatures; a depleted
battery may not function when cold. Keep a fully charged
spare battery in a warm place and exchange as necessary,
or keep the battery in your pocket or other warm place and
insert it in the camera only when shooting. Do not place the
battery in direct contact with hand warmers or other heating
devices.
■
■
Charging the Battery
Charging the Battery
Charge the battery in the supplied battery charger. Charging
times will increase at ambient temperatures below +10 °C
(+50 °F) or above +35 °C (+95 °F). Do not attempt to charge
the battery at temperatures above +40 °C (+104 °F); at tem-
peratures below 0 °C (+32 °F), the battery will not charge.
Do not attempt to recharge a fully charged battery. The bat-
tery does not however need to be fully discharged before
charging.
The battery may be warm to the touch immediately after
charging or use. This is normal.
■
■
Battery Life
Battery Life
At normal temperatures, the battery can be recharged about
300 times. A noticeable decrease in the length of time the
battery will hold a charge indicates that it has reached the
end of its service life and should be replaced.
■
■
Storage
Storage
Performance may be impaired if the battery is left unused
for extended periods when fully charged. Run the battery
fl at before storing it.
If the camera will not be used for an extended period, re-
move the battery and store it in a dry place with an ambient
temperature of from +15 °C to +25 °C (+59 °F to +77 °F). Do
not store in locations exposed to extremes of temperature.
■
■
Cautions: Handling the Battery
Cautions: Handling the Battery
•
Do not transport or store with metal objects such as neck-
laces or hairpins.
•
Do not expose to fl ame or heat.
•
Do not disassemble or modify.
•
Use with designated chargers only.
•
Dispose of used batteries promptly.
•
Do not drop or subject to strong physical shocks.
•
Do not expose to water.
•
Keep the terminals clean.
•
The battery and camera body may become warm to the
touch after extended use. This is normal.
■ Caution:
Disposal
Disposal
Dispose of used batteries in accord with local regulations.
Attention should be drawn to the environmental aspects of
battery disposal. Use the apparatus under moderate climate.

191
Technical Notes
12
For Your Safety
AC Power Adapters
AC Power Adapters
Use only Fujifi lm AC power adapters designated for use with
this camera. Other adapters could damage the camera.
•
The AC power adapter is for indoor use only.
•
Be sure the DC plug is securely connected to the camera.
•
Turn the camera off before disconnecting the adapter. Dis-
connect the adapter by the plug, not the cable.
•
Do not use with other devices.
•
Do not disassemble.
•
Do not expose to high heat and humidity.
•
Do not subject to strong physical shocks.
•
The adapter may hum or become hot to the touch during
use. This is normal.
•
If the adapter causes radio interference, reorient or relocate
the receiving antenna.
Using the Camera
•
Do not aim the camera at extremely bright light sources,
such as the sun in a cloudless sky. Failure to observe this
precaution could damage the camera image sensor.
•
Strong sunlight focused through the viewfi nder may dam-
age the panel of electronic viewfi nder (EVF). Do not aim
the electronic viewfi nder at the sun.
Take Test Shots
Take Test Shots
Before taking photographs on important occasions (such as
at weddings or before taking the camera on a trip), take a
test shot and view the results to ensure that the camera is
functioning normally. FUJIFILM Corporation cannot accept
liability for damages or lost profi ts incurred as a result of
product malfunction.
Notes on Copyright
Notes on Copyright
Unless intended solely for personal use, images recorded
using your digital camera system cannot be used in ways
that infringe copyright laws without the consent of the own-
er. Note that some restrictions apply to the photographing
of stage performances, entertainments, and exhibits, even
when intended purely for personal use. Users are also asked
to note that the transfer of memory cards containing images
or data protected under copyright laws is only permissible
within the restrictions imposed by those copyright laws.
Handling
Handling
To ensure that images are recorded correctly, do not subject
the camera to impact or physical shocks while images are
being recorded.
Liquid Crystal
Liquid Crystal
In the event that the display is damaged, care should be tak-
en to avoid contact with liquid crystal. Take the urgent action
indicated should any of the following situations arise:
•
If liquid crystal comes in contact with your skin, clean the
area with a cloth and then wash thoroughly with soap and
running water.
•
If liquid crystal enters your eyes, fl ush the aff ected eye with
clean water for at least 15 minutes and then seek medical
assistance.
•
If liquid crystal is swallowed, rinse your mouth thoroughly
with water. Drink large quantities of water and induce vom-
iting, then seek medical assistance.
Although the display is manufactured using extremely
high-precision technology, it may contain pixels that are
always lit or that do not light. This is not a malfunction, and
images recorded with the product are unaff ected.
Trademark Information
Trademark Information
Digital Split Image is a trademark or registered trademark
of FUJIFILM Corporation. xD-Picture Card and E are
trademarks of FUJIFILM Corporation. The typefaces includ-
ed herein are solely developed by DynaComware Taiwan
Inc. Mac, OS X, and macOS are trademarks of Apple Inc.
in the U.S.A. and other countries. Windows is a registered
trademark of Microsoft Corporation in the U.S.A. and other
countries. Wi-Fi® and Wi-Fi Protected Setup® are registered
trademarks of the Wi-Fi Alliance. The Bluetooth® word mark
and logos are registered trademarks owned by the Bluetooth
SIG, Inc., and any use of such marks by Fujifi lm is under li-
cense. The SDHC and SDXC logos are trademarks of SD-3C,
LLC. The HDMI logo is a trademark or registered trademark of
HDMI Licensing LLC. All other trade names mentioned in this
manual are the trademarks or registered trademarks of their
respective owners.
Electrical Interference
Electrical Interference
This camera may interfere with hospital or aviation equip-
ment. Consult with hospital or airline staff before using the
camera in a hospital or on an aircraft.
Color Television Systems
Color Television Systems
NTSC (National Television System Committee) is a color tele-
vision telecasting specifi cation adopted mainly in the U.S.A.,
Canada, and Japan. PAL (Phase Alternation by Line) is a color
television system adopted mainly in European countries and
China.
Exif Print (Exif Version 2.3)
Exif Print (Exif Version 2.3)
Exif Print is a newly revised digital camera fi le format in which
information stored with photographs is used for optimal col-
or reproduction during printing.
IMPORTANT NOTICE: Read Before Using the Software
Direct or indirect export, in whole or in part, of licensed soft-
ware without the permission of the applicable governing
bodies is prohibited.

192
Technical Notes
12
NOTICES
To prevent fire or shock hazard, do not expose the unit to rain or moisture.
Please read the “Safety Notes” and make sure you understand them before using the camera.
Perchlorate Material—special handling may apply. See:
http://www.dtsc.ca.gov/hazardouswaste/perchlorate
For Customers in the U. S. A.
For Customers in the U. S. A.
Tested To Comply With FCC Standards
FOR HOME OR OFFICE USE
Contains IC : 7736B-02100005
Contains FCC ID : W2Z-02100005
FCC Statement: This device complies with Part 15 of the FCC
Rules. Operation is subject to the following two conditions:
(1) This device may not cause harmful interference, and
(2)this device must accept any interference received, includ-
ing interference that may cause undesired operation.
CAUTION: This equipment has been tested and found to
comply with the limits for a Class B digital device, pursuant
to Part 15 of the FCC Rules. These limits are designed to pro-
vide reasonable protection against harmful interference in a
residential installation. This equipment generates, uses, and
can radiate radio frequency energy and, if not installed and
used in accordance with the instructions, may cause harmful
interference to radio communications. However, there is no
guarantee that interference will not occur in a particular in-
stallation. If this equipment does cause harmful interference
to radio or television reception, which can be determined by
turning the equipment off and on, the user is encouraged
to try to correct the interference by one or more of the fol-
lowing measures:
•
Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna.
•
Increase the separation between the equipment and re-
ceiver.
•
Connect the equipment into an outlet on a circuit diff erent
from that to which the receiver is connected.
•
Consult the dealer or an experienced radio/TV technician
for help.
FCC Caution: Any changes or modifi cations not expressly ap-
proved by the party responsible for compliance could void
the user’s authority to operate this equipment.
This transmitter must not be co-located or operating in con-
junction with any other antenna or transmitter.
Radiation Exposure Statement: This device meets the gov-
ernment’s requirements for exposure to radio waves. This
device is designed and manufactured not to exceed the
emission limits for exposure to radio frequency (RF) energy
set by the Federal Communications Commission of the U.S.
Government.
The exposure standard for wireless device employs a unit of
measurement known as the Specifi c Absorption Rate, or SAR.
The SAR limit set by the FCC is 1.6W/kg. Tests for SAR are
conducted using standard operating positions accepted by
the FCC with the device transmitting at its highest certifi ed
power level in all tested frequency bands.
Notes on the Grant: To comply with Part 15 of the FCC Rules,
this product must be used with a Fujifi lm-specifi ed fer-
rite-core A/V cable, USB cable, and DC supply cord.
A lithium ion battery that is recyclable powers
the product you have purchased. Please call
1-800-8-BATTERY for information on how to
recycle this battery.

193
Technical Notes
12
For Your Safety
For Customers in Canada
For Customers in Canada
CAN ICES-3 (B)/NMB-3(B)
CAUTION: This Class B digital apparatus complies with Cana-
dian ICES-003.
Industry Canada statement: This device complies with Indus-
try Canada’s licence-exempt RSSs. Operation is subject to the
following two conditions: (1)This device may not cause in-
terference; and (2)This device must accept any interference,
including interference that may cause undesired operation
of the device.
This device and its antenna(s) must not be co-located or op-
erating in conjunction with any other antenna or transmitter,
except tested built-in radios. The County Code Selection
feature is disabled for products marketed in the US/ Canada.
Radiation Exposure Statement: The available scientifi c evi-
dence does not show that any health problems are asso-
ciated with using low power wireless devices. There is no
proof, however, that these low power wireless devices are
absolutely safe. Low power Wireless devices emit low levels
of radio frequency energy (RF) in the microwave range while
being used. Whereas high levels of RF can produce health
eff ects (by heating tissue), exposure of low-level RF that does
not produce heating eff ects causes no known adverse health
eff ects. Many studies of low-level RF exposures have not
found any biological eff ects. Some studies have suggested
that some biological eff ects might occur, but such fi ndings
have not been confi rmed by additional research. XF10 has
been tested and found to comply with IC radiation exposure
limits set forth for an uncontrolled environment and meets
RSS-102 of the IC radio frequency (RF) Exposure rules.
Disposal of Electrical and Electronic Equipment in Private Households
Disposal of Electrical and Electronic Equipment in Private Households
In the European Union, Norway, Iceland and
Liechtenstein: This symbol on the product, or in
the manual and in the warranty, and/or on its
packaging indicates that this product shall not
be treated as household waste. Instead it should
be taken to an applicable collection point for the recycling of
electrical and electronic equipment.
By ensuring this product is disposed of correctly, you will
help prevent potential negative consequences to the en-
vironment and human health, which could otherwise be
caused by inappropriate waste handling of this product.
This symbol on the batteries or accumulators
indicates that those batteries shall not be treated
as household waste.
If your equipment contains easy removable batteries or accu-
mulators please dispose these separately according to your
local requirements.
The recycling of materials will help to conserve natural re-
sources. For more detailed information about recycling this
product, please contact your local city offi ce, your household
waste disposal service or the shop where you purchased the
product.
In Countries Outside the European Union, Norway, Iceland and
Liechtenstein: If you wish to discard this product, including
the batteries or accumulators, please contact your local au-
thorities and ask for the correct way of disposal.
In Japan: This symbol on the batteries indicates
that they are to be disposed of separately.

194
Technical Notes
12
Wireless Network and Bluetooth Devices: Cautions
This product complies with the following EU Directives:
•
RoHS Directive 2011/65/EU
•
RE Directive 2014/53/EU
Hereby, FUJIFILM Corporation declares that the radio
equipment type FF180002 is in compliance with Directive
2014/53/EU.
The full text of the EU declaration of conformity is available
at the following internet address: http://www.fujifilm.com/
products/digital_cameras/x/fujifilm_xf10/pdf/index/
fujifilm_xf10_cod.pdf
This compliance is indicated by the following conformity
marking placed on the product:
This marking is valid for non-Telecom products and EU har-
monized Telecom products (e.g. Bluetooth®).
IMPORTANT: Read the following notices before using the cam-
era’s built-in wireless transmitter.
Q This product, which contains encryption function de-
veloped in the United States, is controlled by the United
States Export Administration Regulations and may not
be exported or re-exported to any country to which the
United States embargoes goods.
•
Use only a wireless network or Bluetooth device
Use only a wireless network or Bluetooth device
.
. Fujifi lm does
not accept liability for damages resulting from unautho-
rized use. Do not use in applications requiring a high de-
gree of reliability, for example in medical devices or other
systems that may directly or indirectly impact human life.
When using the device in computer and other systems that
demand a greater degree of reliability than off ered by wire-
less network or Bluetooth devices, be sure to take all neces-
sary precautions to ensure safety and prevent malfunction.
•
Use only in the country in which the device was purchased.
Use only in the country in which the device was purchased. This
device conforms to regulations governing wireless network
and Bluetooth devices in the country in which it was pur-
chased. Observe all location regulations when using the
device. Fujifi lm does not accept liability for problems aris-
ing from use in other jurisdictions.
•
Do not use the device in locations subject to magnetic elds,
Do not use the device in locations subject to magnetic elds,
static electricity, or radio interference.
static electricity, or radio interference. Do not use the trans-
mitter in the vicinity of microwave ovens or in other loca-
tions subject to magnetic fi elds, static electricity, or radio
interference that may prevent reception of wireless signals.
Mutual interference may occur when the transmitter is
used in the vicinity of other wireless devices operating in
the 2.4GHz band.
•
The wireless transmitter operates in the 2.4 GHz band using
The wireless transmitter operates in the 2.4 GHz band using
DSSS, OFDM and GFSK modulation.
DSSS, OFDM and GFSK modulation.
•
Security: Wireless network and Bluetooth devices transmit
data via radio and consequently their use requires great-
er attention to security than applies in the case of wired
networks.
-
Do not connect to unknown networks or networks to
which you do not have access rights, even if they are
displayed on your device, as such access may be consid-
ered unauthorized. Connect only to networks to which
you have access rights.
-
Be aware that wireless transmissions may be vulnerable
to interception by third parties.
•
The following may be punishable by law:
The following may be punishable by law:
-
Disassembly or modifi cation or this device
-
Removal of device certifi cation labels
•
This device operates on the same frequency as commercial, edu-
This device operates on the same frequency as commercial, edu-
cational, and medical devices and wireless transmitters.
cational, and medical devices and wireless transmitters. It also
operates on the same frequency as licensed transmitters
and special unlicensed low-voltage transmitters used in
RFID tracking systems for assembly lines and in other sim-
ilar applications.
•
To prevent interference with the above devices, observe the fol-
To prevent interference with the above devices, observe the fol-
lowing precautions.
lowing precautions. Confi rm that the RFID transmitter is not
in operation before using this device. Should you observe
that the device causes interference in licensed transmitters
used for RFID tracking, immediately stop using the aff ected
frequency or move the device to another location. If you
notice that this device causes interference in low-voltage
RFID tracing systems, contact a Fujifi lm representative.
•
Do not use this device on board an aircraft.
Do not use this device on board an aircraft. Note that Bluetooth
may remain on even when the camera is off . Bluetooth can
be disabled by selecting OFF for
r
CONNECTION
SETTING> Bluetooth SETTINGS> Bluetooth ON/OFF.

195
Technical Notes
12
For Your Safety
Be sure to read these notes before using the lens
Safety Notes
•
Make sure that you use the lens correctly. Read these safety
notes and the camera Owner’s Manual carefully before use.
•
After reading these safety notes, store them in a safe place.
About the Icons
The icons shown below are used in this document to indicate
the severity of the injury or damage that can result if the in-
formation indicated by the icon is ignored and the product is
used incorrectly as a result.
WARNING
WARNING
This icon indicates that death or serious in-
jury can result if the information is ignored.
CAUTION
CAUTION
This icon indicates that personal injury or
material damage can result if the informa-
tion is ignored.
The icons shown below are used to indicate the nature of the
instructions which are to be observed.
Triangular icons tell you that this information re-
quires attention (“Important”).
Circular icons with a diagonal bar tell you that the
action indicated is prohibited (“Prohibited”).
Filled circles with an exclamation mark indicate an
action that must be performed (“Required”).
WARNING
WARNING
Do not
immerse
Do not immerse in or expose to water.
Do not immerse in or expose to water. Failure to ob-
serve this precaution can cause a fi re or electric
shock.
Do not
disassemble
Do not disassemble (do not open the case).
Do not disassemble (do not open the case). Failure
to observe this precaution can cause fi re, electric
shock, or injury due to product malfunction.
Do not touch
internal
parts
Should the case break open as the result of a fall or other
Should the case break open as the result of a fall or other
accident, do not touch the exposed parts.
accident, do not touch the exposed parts. Failure to ob-
serve this precaution could result in electric shock or
in injury from touching the damaged parts. Remove
the battery immediately, taking care to avoid injury
or electric shock, and take the product to the point
of purchase for consultation.
Do not place on unstable surfaces.
Do not place on unstable surfaces. The product may
fall, causing injury.
Do not view the sun through the lens or camera view-
Do not view the sun through the lens or camera view-
nders.
nders. Failure to observe this precaution can cause
permanent visual impairment.
CAUTION
CAUTION
Do not use or store in locations that are exposed to
Do not use or store in locations that are exposed to
steam, or smoke or are very humid or extremely dusty.
steam, or smoke or are very humid or extremely dusty.
Failure to observe this precaution can cause fi re or
electric shock.
Do not leave in direct sunlight or in locations subject to
Do not leave in direct sunlight or in locations subject to
very high temperatures, such as in a closed vehicle on
very high temperatures, such as in a closed vehicle on
a sunny day.
a sunny day. Failure to observe this precaution can
cause fi re.
Keep out of the reach of small children.
Keep out of the reach of small children. This product
could cause injury in the hands of a child.
Do not handle with wet hands.
Do not handle with wet hands. Failure to observe this
precaution can cause electric shock.
Keep the sun out of the frame when shooting backlit sub-
Keep the sun out of the frame when shooting backlit sub-
jects.
jects. Sunlight focused into the camera when the
sun is in or close to the frame can cause fi re or burns.
When the product is not in use, replace the lens caps and
When the product is not in use, replace the lens caps and
store out of direct sunlight.
store out of direct sunlight. Sunlight focused by the
lens can cause fi re or burns.
Do not carry the camera or lens while they are attached
Do not carry the camera or lens while they are attached
to a tripod.
to a tripod. The product can fall or strike other ob-
jects, causing injury.

196
Technical Notes
12
Product Care
To ensure continued enjoyment of the product, observe
the following precautions.
Camera body: Use a soft, dry cloth to clean the camera body after
each use. Do not use alcohol, thinner, or other volatile chemicals,
which could discolor or deform the leather on the camera body.
Any liquid on the camera should be removed immediately with
a soft, dry cloth. Use a blower to remove dust from the monitor,
taking care to avoid scratches, and then gently wipe with a soft,
dry cloth. Any remaining stains can be removed by wiping gen-
tly with a piece of Fuji lm lens-cleaning paper to which a small
amount of lens-cleaning uid has been applied. Replace the lens
cap before putting the camera away.

197
Technical Notes
12
Firmware Updates
Updates to product rmware may result in changes not de-
scribed in the manual. For more information, visit:
http://www.fujifilm.com/support/digital_cameras/software
Checking the Firmware Version
O
The camera will only display the rmware version if a memory card is
inserted.
1
Turn the camera o and check that a memory card is insert-
ed.
2
Turn the camera on while holding the DISP/BACK button. The
current rmware version will be displayed; check the rm-
ware version.
3
Turn the camera o .

198
Technical Notes
12
Troubleshooting
Consult the table below should you encounter problems
using your camera. If you don’t nd the solution here, con-
tact your local Fuji lm distributor.
Power and Battery
Problem
Problem
Solution
Solution
The camera does not
turn on.
•
The battery is exhausted: Charge the battery or insert a ful-
ly-charged spare battery (
P
30).
•
The battery is inserted incorrectly: Reinsert in the correct ori-
entation (
P
26).
•
The battery-chamber cover is not latched: Latch the bat-
tery-chamber cover (
P
26).
The battery runs down
quickly.
•
The battery is cold: Warm the battery by placing it in a pock-
et or other warm place and reinsert it in the camera im-
mediately before taking a picture.
•
There is dirt on the battery terminals: Clean the terminals
with a soft, dry cloth.
•
ON is selected for PRE-AF: Turn PRE-AF off (
P
105).
•
S is selected for shooting mode: Select a diff erent mode
(
P
52).
•
The battery has been charged many times: The battery has
reached the end of its charging life. Purchase a new bat-
tery.
The camera turns o
suddenly.
The battery is exhausted: Charge the battery or insert a ful-
ly-charged spare battery (
P
30).
Charging does not start.
Reinsert the battery in the correct orientation and make
sure that the AC Power Adapter is plugged in (
P
26,
30).
Charging is slow. Charge the battery at room temperature.

199
Technical Notes
12
Troubleshooting
Problem
Problem
Solution
Solution
The charging lamp
blinks, but the battery
does not charge.
•
There is dirt on the battery terminals: Clean the terminals
with a soft, dry cloth (
P
26).
•
The battery has been charged many times: The battery has
reached the end of its charging life. Purchase a new bat-
tery. If the battery still fails to charge, contact your Fujifi lm
dealer (
P
170).
Menus and Displays
Problem
Problem
Solution
Solution
Display is not in English. Select ENGLISH for a (
P
37, 146).
Shooting
Problem
Problem
Solution
Solution
No picture is taken when
the shutter button is
pressed.
•
The memory card is full: Insert a new memory card or delete
pictures (
P
26, 136).
•
The memory card is not formatted: Format the memory card
(
P
159).
•
There is dirt on the memory card contacts: Clean the contacts
with a soft, dry cloth.
•
The memory card is damaged: Insert a new memory card
(
P
26).
•
The battery is exhausted: Charge the battery or insert a ful-
ly-charged spare battery (
P
30).
•
The camera has turned o automatically: Turn the camera on
(
P
33).
•
The indicator lamp was orange when you attempted to re-
cord a panorama: Wait until the indicator lamps turns off
(
P
59).
Mottling (“noise”)
appears in the monitor
when the shutter button
is pressed halfway.
Gain is increased to aid composition when the subject is
poorly lit and aperture is stopped down, which may result
in noticeable mottling when images are previewed in the
displays. Images taken with the camera are unaff ected.
The camera does not
focus.
The subject is not suited to autofocus: Use focus lock or manual
focus (
P
86).

200
Technical Notes
12
Problem
Problem
Solution
Solution
No face is detected.
•
The subject’s face is obscured by sunglasses, a hat, long hair, or
other objects: Remove the obstructions (
P
104).
•
The subject’s face occupies only a small area of the frame:
Change the composition so that the subject’s face occu-
pies a larger area of the frame (
P
104).
•
The subject’s head is tilted or horizontal: Ask the subject to
hold their head straight (
P
104).
•
The camera is tilted: Keep the camera level.
•
The subject’s face is poorly lit: Shoot in bright light.
Wrong subject is
selected.
The selected subject is closer to the center of the frame
than the main subject. Recompose the picture or turn
face detection off and frame the picture using focus lock
(
P
86).
Movie recording, 4K
burst, and 4K multi-fo-
cus are unavailable.
The memory card write speed is too slow: Use a memory card
with a UHS speed class of 3 or better (
P
29, 46,
71).
The ash does not re.
•
The battery is exhausted: Charge the battery or insert a ful-
ly-charged spare battery (
P
30).
•
The camera is in bracketing or continuous mode: Select single
frame mode (
P
69, 74).
•
OFF is selected for SOUND & FLASH: Select ON
(
P
147).
Some ash modes are
not available.
OFF is selected for SOUND & FLASH: Select ON
(
P
147).
The ash does not fully
light the subject.
•
The subject is not in range of the ash: Position the subject in
range of the fl ash.
•
The ash window is obstructed: Hold the camera correctly.
•
Shutter speed is faster than the sync speed: Choose a slower
shutter speed (
P
54, 57, 209).
Pictures are blurred.
•
The lens is dirty: Clean the lens.
•
The lens is blocked: Keep objects away from the lens
(
P
40).
•
s is displayed during shooting and the focus frame is dis-
played in red: Check focus before shooting (
P
41).

201
Technical Notes
12
Troubleshooting
Problem
Problem
Solution
Solution
Pictures are mottled.
•
Shutter speed is slow and the ambient temperature is high: This
is normal and does not indicate a malfunction.
•
The camera has been used continuously at high temperatures or
a temperature warning is displayed: Turn the camera off and
wait for it to cool down (
P
33, 206).
Playback
Problem
Problem
Solution
Solution
Pictures are grainy.
The pictures were taken with a diff erent make or model of
camera.
Playback zoom is
unavailable.
The pictures were created using RESIZE or with a diff erent
make or model of camera.
No sound in movie
playback.
•
Playback volume is too low: Adjust playback volume
(
P
148).
•
The microphone was obstructed: Hold the camera correctly
during recording.
•
The speaker is obstructed: Hold the camera correctly during
playback.
•
OFF is selected for SOUND & FLASH: Select ON
(
P
147).
Selected pictures are not
deleted.
Some of the pictures selected for deletion are protected.
Remove protection using the device with which it was
originally applied (
P
139).
File numbering is
unexpectedly reset.
The battery-chamber cover was opened while the cam-
era was on. Turn the camera off before opening the bat-
tery-chamber cover (
P
154).
Connections
Problem
Problem
Solution
Solution
The monitor is blank.
The camera is connected to a TV: Pictures will be displayed on
the TV instead of in the camera monitor (
P
174).

202
Technical Notes
12
Problem
Problem
Solution
Solution
No picture or sound
on TV.
•
The camera is not properly connected: Connect the camera
properly (
P
174).
•
Input on the television is set to “TV”: Set input to “HDMI”
(
P
174).
•
The volume on the TV is too low: Use the controls on the tele-
vision to adjust the volume (
P
174).
The computer does not
recognize the camera.
Be sure the camera and computer are correctly connected
(
P
179).
Cannot transfer RAW or
JPEG les to computer.
Use MyFinePix Studio to transfer pictures (Windows only;
P
179).
Wireless Transfer
For additional information on troubleshooting wireless connec-
tions, visit: http://digital-cameras.support.fujifilm.com/app?pid=x
Problem
Problem
Solution
Solution
Problem connecting or
uploading pictures to
smartphone.
•
The smartphone is too far away: Move the devices closer
(
P
176).
•
Nearby devices are causing radio interference: Move the cam-
era and smartphone away from microwave ovens or cord-
less phones (
P
176).
Cannot upload images.
•
The smartphone is connected to another device: The smart-
phone and camera can connect to only one device at a
time. End the connection and try again.
•
There are several smartphones in the vicinity: Try connecting
again. The presence of multiple smartphones can make
connection diffi cult.
•
The image was created on another device: The camera may
not be able to upload images created on other devices.
•
The image is a movie: Uploading movies takes some time.
Movies intended for display on a smartphone or tablet
should be recorded at a frame size of 1280 × 720 (HD) or
smaller. For information on viewing the pictures on the cam-
era, visit: http://app.fujifilm-dsc.com/en/camera_remote/

203
Technical Notes
12
Troubleshooting
Problem
Problem
Solution
Solution
Smartphone will not
display pictures.
Select ON for RESIZE IMAGE FOR SMARTPHONE H.
Selecting OFF increases upload times for larger images; in
addition, some phones may not display images over a cer-
tain size (
P
158).
Miscellaneous
Problem
Problem
Solution
Solution
The camera is unresponsive.
•
Temporary camera malfunction: Remove and reinsert the
battery (
P
26).
•
The battery is exhausted: Charge the battery or insert a
fully-charged spare battery (
P
30).
•
The camera is connected to a wireless LAN: End the con-
nection.
The camera does not func-
tion as expected.
Remove and reinsert the battery (
P
26). If the
problem persists, contact your Fujifi lm dealer.
No sound.
•
Adjust the volume (
P
148).
•
Select ON for SOUND & FLASH (
P
147).
Time and date stamps.
•
Time and date stamps are not correct: Set the camera
clock (
P
37, 146).
•
Time and date stamps appear on photographs: Time and
date stamps cannot be deleted. To prevent stamps
appearing on new photographs, select OFF for SAVE
DATA SET-UP> DATE STAMP (
P
155).

204
Technical Notes
12
Warning Messages and Displays
The following warnings appear in the display.
Warning
Warning
Description
Description
i (red)
Low battery. Charge the battery or insert a fully-charged
spare battery.
j (blinks red)
Battery exhausted. Charge the battery or insert a ful-
ly-charged spare battery.
s (displayed in red with
red focus frame)
The camera cannot focus. Use focus lock to focus on an-
other subject at the same distance, then recompose the
picture.
Aperture or shutter
speed displayed in red
The subject is too bright or too dark and the picture will be
over- or under-exposed. Use the fl ash for additional light-
ing when taking photographs of poorly-lit subject.
FOCUS ERROR
Camera malfunction. Turn the camera off and then on
again. If the message persists, contact a Fujifi lm dealer.
LENS CONTROL ERROR
TURN OFF THE CAMERA
AND TURN ON AGAIN
NO CARD
The shutter can only be released when a memory card is
inserted. Insert a memory card.
CARD NOT INITIALIZED
•
The memory card is not formatted or the memory card has been
formatted in a computer or other device: Format the memory
card using K FORMAT.
•
The memory card contacts require cleaning: Clean the con-
tacts with a soft, dry cloth. If the message is repeated,
format the card. If the message persists, replace the card.
•
Camera malfunction: Contact a Fujifi lm dealer.

205
Technical Notes
12
Warning Messages and Displays
Warning
Warning
Description
Description
CARD ERROR
•
The memory card is not formatted for use in the camera: For-
mat the card.
•
The memory card contacts require cleaning or the memory card
is damaged: Clean the contacts with a soft, dry cloth. If the
message is repeated, format the card. If the message per-
sists, replace the card.
•
Incompatible memory card: Use a compatible card.
•
Camera malfunction: Contact a Fujifi lm dealer.
PROTECTED CARD
The memory card is locked. Unlock the card.
BUSY
The memory card is incorrectly formatted. Use the camera
to format the card.
b MEMORY FULL
The memory card is full and pictures cannot be recorded.
Delete pictures or insert a memory card with more free
space.
WRITE ERROR
•
Memory card error or connection error: Reinsert the card or
turn the camera off and then on again. If the message
persists, contact a Fujifi lm dealer.
•
Not enough memory remaining to record additional pictures:
Delete pictures or insert a memory card with more free
space.
•
The memory card is not formatted: Format the memory card.
FRAME NO. FULL
The camera has run out of frame numbers (current frame
number is 999-9999). Format the memory card and select
RENEW for FRAME NO.. Take a picture to reset frame
numbering to 100-0001, then select CONTINUOUS for
FRAME NO..

206
Technical Notes
12
Warning Messages and Displays
Warning
Warning
Description
Description
READ ERROR
•
The le is corrupt or was not created with the camera: The fi le
cannot be viewed.
•
The memory card contacts require cleaning: Clean the con-
tacts with a soft, dry cloth. If the message is repeated,
format the card. If the message persists, replace the card.
•
Camera malfunction: Contact a Fujifi lm dealer.
PROTECTED FRAME
An attempt was made to delete or rotate to a protected pic-
ture. Remove protection and try again.
CAN NOT CROP
The picture is damaged or was not created with the camera.
DPOF FILE ERROR
Print orders can contain no more than 999 pictures. Copy
any additional pictures you wish to print to another memo-
ry card and create a second print order.
CAN NOT ROTATE
The selected picture cannot be rotated.
F CAN NOT ROTATE
Movies cannot be rotated.
CAN NOT SET DPOF
The picture cannot be printed using DPOF.
F CAN NOT SET DPOF
Movies cannot be printed using DPOF.
F CANNOT EXECUTE
Red-eye removal cannot be applied to movies.
m CANNOT EXECUTE
Red-eye removal cannot be applied to pictures created
with other devices.
p
Turn the camera off and wait for it to cool. Mottling may
increase in pictures taken when this warning is displayed.

207
Technical Notes
12
Memory Card Capacity
The following table shows the recording time or number
of pictures available at di erent image sizes. All gures are
approximate; le size varies with the scene recorded, pro-
ducing wide variations in the number of les that can be
stored. The number of exposures or length remaining may
not diminish at an even rate.
Capacity
Capacity
T
T
8GB
8GB
16GB
16GB
FINE
FINE
NORMAL
NORMAL
FINE
FINE
NORMAL
NORMAL
Photos
Photos
O
O
3
3
∶
∶
2
2 668 1064 1337 2130
RAW (UNCOMPRESSED)
RAW (UNCOMPRESSED) 186 372
Movies
Movies
1, 2
1, 2
V
V
2160/15P
2160/15P 9 minutes 20 minutes
i
i
1080/59.94P, 50P, 24P, 23.98P
1080/59.94P, 50P, 24P, 23.98P 26 minutes 54 minutes
h
h
720/59.94P, 50P, 24P, 23.98P
720/59.94P, 50P, 24P, 23.98P 51 minutes 105 minutes
1 Use a UHS speed class 3 card or better.
2 Individual movies cannot exceed 30 minutes in length.
O
Although movie recording will continue without interruption when the le
size reaches 4 GB, subsequent footage will be recorded to a separate le
which must be viewed separately.

208
Technical Notes
12
Speci cations
System
Model FUJIFILM XF10
Product Number FF180002
E ective pixels Approx. 24.2 million
Image sensor 23.5mm × 15.7mm (APS-C format), CMOS (complementary
metal-oxide semiconductor) image sensor with square pixels
and primary color fi lter
Storage media Fujifi lm-recommended SD/SDHC/SDXC memory cards
Memory card slots SD memory card slot (UHS-1)
File system Compliant with Design Rule for Camera File System (DCF),
Exif2.3, and Digital Print Order Format (DPOF)
File format
•
Still pictures: Exif 2.3 JPEG (compressed); RAW (original RAF for-
mat, special purpose software required); RAW+JPEG available
•
Movies: H.264 standard with stereo sound (MOV)
Image size
O
3∶2 (6000 × 4000)
P
3∶2
(4240
×
2832)
Q
3∶2 (3008 × 2000)
O
16∶9 (6000 × 3376)
P
16∶9
(4240
×
2384)
Q
16∶9 (3008 × 1688)
O
1∶1 (4000 × 4000)
P
1∶1
(2832
×
2832)
Q
1∶1 (2000 × 2000)
RAW (6000 × 4000)
O panorama: vertical (2160 × 9600)/horizontal (9600 × 1440)
P panorama: vertical (2160 × 6400)/horizontal (6400 × 1440)
Lens
•
Type: FUJINON fi xed focal length lens
•
Focal length: f=18.5mm (35 mm format equivalent: 28mm)
•
Maximum aperture: F2.8
Sensitivity
•
Still pictures: Standard output sensitivity equivalent to
ISO200 – 12800 in increments of ⁄EV; AUTO; extended out-
put sensitivity equivalent to ISO100, 25600, or 51200
•
Movies: Standard output sensitivity equivalent to ISO400 – 6400
in increments of ⁄EV; AUTO
Metering 256-segment through-the-lens (TTL) metering; MULTI, SPOT,
AVERAGE
Exposure control Programmed AE (with program shift); shutter-priority AE;
aperture-priority AE; manual exposure
Exposure compensation
•
Still pictures: −5EV – +5EV in increments of ⁄EV
•
Movies: −2EV – +2EV in increments of ⁄EV

209
Technical Notes
12
Speci cations
System
Shutter speed
•
Mechanical shutter
⁃ Mode P: 4s to ¼ s
⁃ Other modes: 30s to ¼ s
⁃ Bulb: Max. 60min.
⁃ Time: 30s to ¼ s
•
Electronic shutter
⁃ Mode P: 4s to ⁄s
⁃ Other modes: 30s to ⁄s
⁃ Bulb: Fixed at 1s
⁃ Time: 30s to ⁄s
•
Mechanical+electronic
⁃ Mode P: 4s to ⁄s
⁃ Other modes: 30s to ⁄s
⁃ Bulb: Max. 60min.
⁃ Time: 30s to ⁄s
Continuous
Mode
Mode
Frame rate (fps)
Frame rate (fps)
Frames per burst
Frames per burst
J
6.0 Up to approximately 10
O
3.0 Up to approximately 10
O
The frame rate varies with shooting conditions and
the number of images recorded. In addition, the
frame rate and number of frames per burst may
vary depending on the type of memory card used.
Focus
•
Mode: Single or continuous AF; manual focus with control
ring; AF+MF; snapshot
•
Focus-area selection: SINGLE POINT, ZONE, WIDE/TRACKING,
ALL
•
Autofocus system: Intelligent hybrid AF (TTL contrast-detect/
phase-detection AF) with AF-assist illuminator
White balance Custom, color temperature selection, auto, direct sunlight,
shade, daylight fl uorescent, warm white fl uorescent, cool
white fl uorescent, incandescent, underwater
Self-timer Off , 2sec., 10sec., Face auto shutter, Smile, Buddy, Group
Flash
•
Type: Auto fl ash
•
E ective range (ISO1600): Approx. 0.3m – 7.5m/1.0ft. – 24.6ft.

210
Technical Notes
12
System
Flash mode Auto, fi ll fl ash, off , slow sync, rear-curtain sync, commander
(red-eye removal off ); auto with red-eye removal, fi ll fl ash
with red-eye removal, off , slow sync with red-eye removal,
rear-curtain sync with red-eye removal, commander (red-eye
removal on)
Hot shoe –
Sync contact –
Sync terminal –
View nder –
LCD monitor Fixed 3.0-in/7.6 cm, 1040k-dot color touch screen LCD
monitor
Movies
•
Movies with stereo sound
V 2160/15P i 1080/59.94P h 720/59.94P
i 1080/50P h 720/50P
i 1080/24P h 720/24P
i 1080/23.98P h 720/23.98P
•
Silent HD high-speed movies
1.6×
a59.94P F100P
2×
a50P F100P
3.3×
a29.97P F100P
4×
a25P F100P
Input/output terminals
Digital input/output USB 2.0 High-Speed
Micro USB connector (Micro-B)
HDMI output HDMI Micro connector (Type D)
Microphone/remote
release connector
⌀2.5mm 3-pole mini jack

211
Technical Notes
12
Speci cations
Power supply/other
Power supply NP-95 rechargeable battery (supplied with camera)
Camera size
(W × H × D)
112.5mm × 64.4mm × 41.0mm (25.9mm excluding projections,
measured at thinnest part)/4.43in. × 2.54in. × 1.62in. (1.02in.)
Camera weight Approx. 241.2g/8.5oz., excluding battery, accessories, and
memory card
Shooting weight Approx. 278.9g/9.8oz., including battery and memory card
Operating conditions
•
Temperature: 0°C to +40°C/+32°F to +104°F
•
Humidity: 10% to 80% (no condensation)
Battery life
•
Battery type: NP-95
•
Shooting mode: mode P
Approximate number of frames
Approximate number of frames
330
Mode
Mode
Actual Battery life of
Actual Battery life of
movie capture
movie capture
Continuance Battery life
Continuance Battery life
of movie capture
of movie capture
V
Approx. 55minutes Approx. 75minutes
i
Approx. 70minutes Approx. 120minutes
CIPA standard, measured using battery supplied with camera
and SD memory card.
Note: Number of shots that can be taken with battery varies
with battery charge level and will decline at low temperatures.
Wireless transmitter
Wireless LAN
Standards IEEE 802.11b/g/n (standard wireless protocol)
Operating frequency
(center frequency)
•
Japan, China: 2,412MHz–2,472MHz (13 channels)
•
Other countries: 2,412MHz–2,462MHz (11 channels)
Access protocols Infrastructure
Bluetooth®
Standards Bluetooth version 4.1 (Bluetooth Low Energy)
Operating frequency
(center frequency)
2,402MHz–2,480MHz

212
Technical Notes
12
Speci cations
NP-95 rechargeable battery
Nominal voltage 3.6V DC
Nominal capacity 1,800mAh
Operating
temperature
0°C to +40°C/+32°F to +104°F
Dimensions
(W × H × D)
35.2mm × 49.5mm× 10.8mm/1.4in. × 1.9in. × 0.4in.
Weight Approx. 36g/1.3oz.
AC-5VG AC power adapter
Rated input 100V – 240V AC, 50/60Hz
Input capacity 10.5VA (100V), 11.9VA (240V)
Rated output 5.0V DC, 1000mA
Operating
temperature
0°C to +40°C/+32°F to +104°F
Weight Approx. 26g ± 15%/0.9oz. ± 15% (AC power adapter only)
Weight and dimensions vary with the country or region of sale. Labels, menus,
and other displays may diff er from those on the actual camera.
O
Speci cations and performance are subject to change without notice.
Fuji lm will not be held liable for any errors this manual may contain.
The appearance of the product may di er from that described in this
manual.

213
MEMO

214
MEMO

215
MEMO

7-3, AKASAKA 9-CHOME, MINATO-KU, TOKYO 107-0052, JAPAN
http://www.fujifilm.com/products/digital_cameras/index.html
