 Hello and welcome to MBS's first tutorial video of the year. So currently I'm just going to show you how to pull on the little lens. So just pick up your lens and just put it into the camera and you just twist it until you hear it click. But I'm just going to open up the screen now and then this little button here just turns it right on. If you're wanting to change your camera from picture to record there's this little slider up here and you just twist that to the record button and that's very simple. At this point we recommend using manual and it's right on this little dial here because you can choose your aperture, ISO and shutter speed. So we're going to go to the more technical side here at the moment and we're going to have shutter speed, aperture and ISO. So shutter speed basically is how long it takes to further the shutter to actually take something. So at ISO you can go from between 100 and 1600 is usually kind of the recommended thing because so let's say if you're in a very, very, very dark area you will bring up your ISO to a very high point so that's much brighter and you'll be able to see things much easier. Now for example this room we're in currently is a bit dark so if we're on for example 800 that should do perfectly and we'll be able to see everything perfectly without any issues. And now finding to aperture. So going back to shutter speed let's say if you have a low shutter speed you want much higher aperture because that'll kind of make up then for all kinds of loss lighting or whatever and we'll really kind of balance out the image. So with metering mode you see we've quite a few options here. So first of all we centre-weighted. This is kind of the classic way of filming it's been what we've been doing since day one. So this base is that the most important part of the shell is the very centre and then we have spot and partial. Now these two are very similar so basically your camera uses a very small circle in the centre of the scene and this is very useful when choosing on a very dark subject on a bright background. Instead of thinking that the centre is the most important part of value of metering and considers what else is in focus and where you've placed the focus point. Tapping this little button here for photography this pops out the flash which can be used very simply as if you're in a dark place and you can't see anything use the flash and there you'll take a picture and it'll be much better looking. While unfortunately this cannot be used for video. For video you'd need an external light which would have to be purchased as an add-on to the camera. You're like Andrew I've recorded so much cool stuff but I don't know how to like watch it back. So this is where the menu comes in. So just tap your little menu button and you can look through all your footage and if you have some really god-awful footage you can just delete it very handily. Use the little trash button at the very bottom right and in and then if you have some amazing images you can go through them and nostalgically look at them and see what you're going to do with them next. Oh and that's our 10 steps done so now you've kind of mastered the basics of a camera. It's actually not hard to use and now once you want to get into more fine detail stuff we'll have a video coming for that very soon as well so please look forward to that.